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'Unworldly' Smith The Players champion

Australian Cameron Smith has won the PGA Tour's richest and most prestigious tournament, The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Florida.

CAMERON SMITH
CAMERON SMITH Picture: Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

Cameron Smith is being hailed for his "unworldly" brilliance after scoring the biggest win of his career, taking out The Players Championship in Florida in extraordinary, record-setting fashion.

Smith carded a birdie-filled and dramatic six-under-par 66 to record a steely one-shot victory at TPC Sawgrass and join a who's who of golf greats on the honour roll.

He finished at 13 under for the tournament, with plucky surprise third-round leader Anirban Lahiri settling for outright second after closing with a 69.

Englishman Paul Casey (69) was third at 11 under, with American Kevin Kisner (68) a further shot back in fourth and Keegan Bradley (68) rounding out the top five at nine under.

Apart from the prestige of winning the PGA Tour's flagship event and the game's unofficial fifth major, Smith pocketed the richest winner's cheque for a PGA Tour event of $US3.6 million ($A5 million) and will rocket to second in the season-long FedExCup standings.

Described by awestruck US commentators as "unworldly", Smith's rollercoaster round in the tour's wild Monday finish after a weather-marred week featured an unprecedented 10 birdies on the Stadium Course, including five in the first six holes.

But the victory wasn't without endless tension, with Smith finding the water on the 18th hole and needing a scrambling up-and-down bogey to fend off Lahiri.

Fittingly, he delivered to complete the best putting display in the tournament's 49-year history.

Smith's 101 putts for the 72 holes was the fewest by any winner in almost half a century.

The 28-year-old joins fellow Australians Steve Elkington (1991 and 1997), Greg Norman (1994), Adam Scott (2004) and Jason Day (2016) on the famous honour board.

Other champions include major-winning legends Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.

"It's huge. It's gonna take a while to sink in," Smith said.

"Obviously lots of Australians have won here - lots of great Australian golfers - but the best that have ever lived have won here, as well.

"So it's pretty cool to have the name on the same trophy as them."

The Queenslander choked up after describing the emotion of winning in front of his mother and sister, who were visiting Smith, who lives nearby at Jacksonville Beach.

"I haven't seen them in two years so it's really cool to have them here," he said.

"My main priority really was to hang out with them and golf was second these few weeks so it's nice to see them and get the win for them."

Smith's latest triumph follows his victory at the Tournament of Champions in Hawaii in January, when he won with a record score of 34 under par.

He will rise to world No.6 ahead of next month's Masters, the year's first major at Augusta National.

To put his mega winner's cheque in perspective, Smith's victory spoils topped Trevino's entire career earnings.

But Smith couldn't put a price on his fifth PGA Tour win, especially after enduring such a nerve-wracking final round.

Resuming his third round on the 11th hole after five days of ferocious wind and rain, Smith birdied the island green par-3 17th to pull within two shots of Lahiri entering the final round.

With birdies at the first four holes, then another on the sixth, Smith was suddenly two strokes in front.

But he made three consecutive bogeys to fall back as Lahiri, Casey and Bradley - who picked up an incredible 13 shots in 24 holes on Monday - also hit the lead at different stages.

Smith appeared to be running away with the trophy with a string of four birdies to start his back nine and then recovering from a duck-hook tee shot on the 16th to make a miraculous par.

But after draining his 10th birdie on the signature 17th hole, Smith had to dig deep one final time at the last.

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