Daniel Berger probably wouldn't mind if each of his tournaments were held in Memphis at the FedEx St. Jude Classic.
The 24-year-old is the fourth back-to-back victor at St. Jude and the first since David Toms did it in 2003 and '04. Amateur Braden Thornberry and former Gator Billy Horschel were among five players two shots back.
Sutherland, whose only PGA Tour win came at the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship 15 years ago, played largely mistake-free golf and scored multiple birdies on par 3, 4 and 5s.
Kim, 25, was tied for ninth to start the fourth round and picked up four birdies against one bogey for a strong finish. Stewart Cink - who shared the first-round lead along with Matt Every, Scott Brown and Munoz - was one stroke back after his 68 at the PGA Tour's final event before the U.S. Open. Now he's in a three-way tie with Rafa Cabrera Bello and Ben Crane for the lead at the St. Jude Classic after three rounds.
Schwartzel grabbed the outright lead by picking up a shot at the second and missed a putt from six feet to double his advantage at the next, before bogeying his penultimate hole.
Scott McCarron, who won in Iowa in 2016, was second at 13 under after shooting a final round 66.
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European: Dylan Frittelli shot a 5-under-par 67 to win the Lyoness Open for his first European Tour title.
He's now ranked 137th after 12 events this year, but he has four top-25 finishes including a recent T13 at the Texas Open to help his confidence.
Cink had a good start on Saturday, with birdies on three of his first five holes.
He promptly dropped three strokes at the par-four 12th and shot 68, finishing three shots behind Berger. "So going back to 2008 probably, the first half of '08, and I really, really felt good about my game and I felt like I had a chance to win a lot of tournaments".
Schwartzel played well for most of the tournament, but a 4-over 74 in the third round made for a steep hill to climb on Sunday. She three-putted from 35 feet on the 18th and missed a 4-footer for the win.


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