Sungjae Im's chaotic two-hole stretch includes wild bunker ricochet

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Sungjae Im's chaotic two-hole stretch includes wild bunker ricochet

Sungjae Im's chaotic two-hole stretch includes wild bunker ricochet

At the Truist Championship, Sungjae Im navigated an unlucky sequence of shots, including a pond recovery and bunker replay.

Sungjae Im's chaotic two-hole stretch includes wild bunker ricochet

At the Truist Championship, Sungjae Im navigated an unlucky sequence of shots, including a pond recovery and bunker replay.

Golf has a funny way of humbling even the best players. Just ask Sungjae Im, who found himself in the middle of a chaotic two-hole stretch during the third round of the Truist Championship at Quail Hollow that tested both his skill and his composure.

It all started at the 14th hole, a drivable 328-yard par 4 that many players opted to attack. Im crushed a 312-yard tee shot that landed pin-high in the left rough, but a cruel bounce left his ball resting mere inches from the water. With no stance to speak of, Im did what any resourceful golfer would do: he removed his right shoe, planted his rear foot in the pond, and splashed out a chip shot that landed close. He calmly sank the 9-foot birdie putt, turning what looked like a disaster into a highlight-reel save.

But the golf gods weren't done with him yet. At the par-5 15th, Im's approach found a greenside bunker. After a few extra looks, he pulled the trigger on his third shot — and the result was a bladed wedge that rocketed over the green, slammed into the grandstands, and took a wild ricochet back toward the putting surface. The ball landed with speed, rolled past the hole, and trickled all the way back into the same bunker, forcing Im to replay the exact same shot after the worst-case scenario had already unfolded.

Here's the most impressive part: despite the chaos, Im managed to play that two-hole stretch at even par. It's a powerful reminder that resilience is just as important as shot-making in this game. Whether you're navigating a tricky lie or bouncing back from a bad break, keeping your cool can make all the difference — on the course and in the gear you trust to get you through it.

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