We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

2024 3M Open leaderboard, grades: Jhonattan Vegas birdies final hole to win for first time in seven years

For the first time in seven years, Jhonattan Vegas has found his way into the winner's circle. Converting his 54-hole lead at the 2024 3M Open into a one-stroke victory over Max Greyserman at 17 under, the 39-year-old – playing on a major medical extension — claimed his fourth PGA Tour title at TPC Twin Cities.

With the win, Vegas secures his playing privileges on the PGA Tour for the next two seasons while also punching his ticket into major championships like the Masters and PGA Championship in 2025. He will tee it up in the Players Championship as well and is now on the inside track to qualify for the playoffs as he rises to No. 66 in the FedEx Cup standings with just one regular season event remaining.

"It's always a great feeling," Vegas said. "Winning out here, we know how hard it is so every win is special, especially like I said coming back from two surgeries. It was a very hard day for me today, I didn't feel 100% which is something I have been battling the past few weeks as well. It took a lot. It really makes the win super special…it's just so, so exciting to win and whatever comes with it."

Battling the injury bug over the last half decade, Vegas was vintage in Minnesota this week. Striking the ball with confidence and without a three putt all tournament, the Venezuelan tied it all together just tight enough to eke out the win.

Sunday's affairs were anything but easy for the overnight leader as he needed to convert a 12-foot bogey putt on his opening hole. Dropping out of a share of the lead when Matt Kuchar put a circle on his scorecard on the par-4 2nd, Vegas immediately knew the fight he was up against.

A couple birdies came on his front side before an inexplicable approach shot into the difficult ninth found the water. Able to get up-and-down from a tricky spot in front of the green, Vegas went into the inward half still in possession of the lead. It would slip from his grasp when a bogey arrived on the par-3 13th as Maverick McNealy joined the party.

With Greyserman up ahead closing in 30 and posting 16 under courtesy of a final-round 63, the clubhouse lead was set and Vegas had a target score to chase. A birdie bid from 10 feet came soon after on the par-4 15th to pull Vegas' name alongside Greyserman's with three to play.

A pair of pars set the stage for the closing par-5 18th where Vegas found the surface in two. With his approach settling 96 feet from the pin, Vegas gave himself a 3-foot birdie putt to clinch the 3M Open title and everything else that comes with it including his first victory since the 2017 RBC Canadian Open. Grade: A+ 

Here are the grades for the rest of the notables on the leaderboard at the 3M Open

5. Taylor Pendrith (-14): The long-hitting Canadian entered the weekend with a two-stroke lead and without a bogey on his scorecard but got punched in the face on Saturday. Getting to 14 under at one stage, Pendrith started to go in the wrong direction in the middle of his round playing a four-hole stretch in 4 over. He bounced back nicely on Sunday with a sub-70 round to improve his place inside the top 30 of the FedEx Cup standings and improve his candidacy for the International Presidents Cup team. Grade: A

"It stings a little bit to not have a great round yesterday, just couldn't really get anything going," Pendrith said. "Missed quite a few fairways yesterday and made some sloppy mistakes. Yeah, obviously overall it was a great week, I played some really good golf for three days, so I'm pleased but a little bit disappointed with my performance yesterday."

T6. Sahith Theegala (-13): This tournament was begging for someone to go out and seize it and Theegala was the name on the leaderboard many thought would. After carding a couple birdies in his first six holes, Theegala lost his swing ever so slightly leading to back-to-back bogeys before the turn. His driver continued to set up scoring opportunities but some short misses with his new putter and some uncharacteristic wedge shots left him stuck in neutral. Grade: B+

T13. Tony Finau (-11): Finau's week was the definition of a mixed bag as it featured plenty of good and plenty of not so good with 20 birdies, 11 bogeys and one eagle. The 2022 champion had enough firepower to contend in this tournament, but the combination of some short misses on the greens and wide misses off the tee were his undoing. He now has six straight top 20s in the United States and rebounded well off that disappointing 81 in the second round of The Open. Grade: B

T13. Sam Burns (-11): Burns' tournament could have gotten away from him early Thursday when he hit two balls in the water on No. 7. He hung tough, however, got into red figures and then carded nine birdies on Friday to push his name back into the mix. Similar to Finau, Burns had the scoring to win this golf tournament as he put 24 birdies and an eagle on the scorecard over the course of the week. Unfortunately, he also carded a quadruple bogey and triple bogey along the way. Grade: B

T64. Akshay Bhatia (-2): The big stick was a big letdown for Bhatia this week. Amid a stretch of play where the driver has been both long and accurate, the lengthy left hander was unable to wield that club effectively around TPC Twin Cities losing a total of four balls off the tee. The good news is it got better as the week progressed, but the bad news is by then he was already out of tournament contention. He now shifts his focus to the postseason as he checks in inside the top 20 in the FedEx Cup standings. Grade: D

Rick Gehman, Patrick McDonald, Greg DuCharme recap the 2024 3M Open and Jhonattan Vegas' first win in seven years. Follow & listen to The First Cut on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

  
No ad available
Live updates
 
@GOLFonCBS via Twitter
 

McNealy continues to scramble

He has now missed five of his first 11 greens, but he remains even par for the round. Maverick McNealy is still very much in this tournament at 14 under and two behind Jhonattan Vegas, but he is going to need to start giving himself birdie putts instead of par saves if he expects to capture win No. 1.

No ad available
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@GOLFonCBS via Twitter
 
@GOLFonCBS via Twitter
 
@GOLFonCBS via Twitter
 

Vegas takes two-stroke lead into back nine

After hitting his approach into the water on No. 9, Vegas saves bogey to drop to 16 under and even for the day. He leads by two, but will have the advantage on the back nine given that he has played that side in particular in 16 under on the week. 

 
@GOLFonCBS via Twitter
 

Vegas' lead balloons to three

No one has been able to apply pressure on the overnight leader and after losing his lead at one point, Jhonattan Vegas now leads by three at 17 under. He hasn't done anything too crazy, but with Matt Kuchar carding a couple bogeys, it has opened up for the Venezuelan. 

 

Theegala inching towards the lead

Sahith is now just two back and behind only two players on the leaderboard. A pair of birdies combined with some short-game magic as Theegala at 14 under. Coming into the week, Theegala had played in the 3M Open three times and missed the cut in each instance.

 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
No ad available
 

Vegas regains solo lead

It has been a back-and-forth opening to this final round. A two-shot swing occurs on the fourth hole as Jhonny Vegas cards birdie and Matt Kuchar makes a mistakes off the tee and drops a shot. They return to where they were at the beginning of the day with Vegas at 16 under and Kuchar at 15 under. Mav McNealy is just hanging around with four straight pars to stand at 14 under in that final threesome.

 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 

Kuchar grabs solo lead

In two holes, Matt Kuchar has made up two strokes. The nine-time PGA Tour winner is now alone atop the leaderboard after a par-birdie start to reach 16 under. With an ugly bogey from Jhonattan Vegas on the first, Kuchar leads by one over his playing partner.

 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 

Final threesome steps onto the golf course

Jhonattan Vegas is in the middle of the fairway on the opening hole as he begins his march to the finish line. He starts at 16 under and one clear of Matt Kuchar and two clear of Maverick McNealy. Keep an eye on Vegas' putter today — he didn't really need it much yesterday as his ball striking was that good.

 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 

Former Champ showing how it is done

Cameron Champ is the low man on the golf course right now. Another birdie on No. 14 has gotten him to 7 under on his round with a handful of holes still to play. He's 10 under for the tournament and inside the top 10 thanks to seven birdies in a 10-hole stretch.

No ad available
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 

Slow start for Tony Finau

A bad finish yesterday took him out of this tournament and a bad start today will make his Sunday feel even longer. Making bogey from the middle of the fairway on No. 1, Finau drops to 6 under for a week that has been riddled with ups and downs.

 

Loved this from Sahith yesterday

"I really tried to make an emphasis on this week to get over that hurdle I have with the course," Theegala said. "Just the way my game's been throughout my life, I usually don't have courses that I feel like don't suit me that well. I'm just an optimist about a lot of golf courses and I'm like, well, the course is how it is, you've just got to figure it out, right? I think this is probably the only Tour stop that I haven't made a cut at before this week. I don't know, someone's going to have to fact check that, but I think it's probably the only one."

 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
 
@PGATOUR via Twitter
2 of 3
No ad available