PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Viktor Hovland knows his moment on golf's biggest stage is coming. Of course, he'd be fine if it would just hurry up and get here already.
For the third straight major, the 25-year-old Norwegian with the incandescent wardrobe and the even more vibrant game found his name floating near the top leaderboard on the final day. And for the third straight major, Hovland watched someone else putt out on the 18th and raise their arms in triumph.
Last summer on the Old Course at St. Andrews, it was Cam Smith. Last month at Augusta National, it was Jon Rahm. On Sunday at a suddenly forgiving Oak Hill, it was playing partner Brooks Koepka, who spent four entertaining and occasionally tense hours fending off challenge after challenge from Hovland before pulling away in the fading western New York sunlight.
Hovland's hopes of becoming the first Norwegian to win a major evaporated on the par-4 16th when his tee shot sailed into a fairway bunker. Trailing by a shot and with Koepka's ball in the rough, Hovland pulled out a 9-iron and attempted to gouge the ball to safety, only to see it disappear into the lip.
One drop, one punch out, one so-so approach and two putts later, the deficit was four. While Hovland salvaged a tie with Scottie Scheffler for second by draining a nervy 15-footer on 18 to finish off a 2-under 68 to wind up at 7 under for the tournament, the T2 next to his name is going to sting for a bit. At least until he gets to Los Angeles Country Club next month for the U.S. Open.
Hovland knows he's close. He's growing increasingly comfortable in the exacting crucible the spotlight of a major provides. Four days of par or better golf on the demanding East Course proved it yet again.
"Felt like I played really solid golf," Hovland said. "I gave myself a lot of looks. When I was out of position, I made some great short-game shots and got out of there with a par, but Brooks was hard to catch."
Hovland came as close as anyone, responding nearly every time Koepka threatened to pull away. Koepka's lead ballooned from one shot to three after he birdied the second, third and fourth holes.