When Tommy Fleetwood three-putted the 72nd hole to lose the Travelers Championship to Keegan Bradley, he stood in front of the media and promised resolve after flushing his disappointment and anger. Two months later, Fleetwood again bungled a late lead as he watched Justin Rose steal the FedEx St. Jude Championship from him. It was there, in Memphis, that Fleetwood vowed to take the positives from another heartbreak. He was adamant that his story was written and would continue to enjoy every chance he had to track down his first PGA Tour win.
It was in his close calls, the heartbreaks, that Fleetwood revealed part of himself. An eternal optimist, Fleetwood’s perspective and positive mindset were a steadying force that allowed him to pick himself off the mat and go again when the time called. The disappointments were gutting, of course. He felt them. The scars were real. But where sports often feed us athletes whose “killer instinct” is shrouded in steely stares, amplified bravado and outbursts at failure, Tommy Fleetwood offered us something different.
A resilience born out of pride, heart and a belief that the relentless chase of his dreams was leading somewhere.
“I work really hard on making sure that I make it all into a positive,” Fleetwood said on Tuesday ahead of the Tour Championship at East Lake. “Of course, I’m not going to feed you lies and say, ‘Oh, Memphis I thought I did everything great, or Travelers, I didn’t do anything wrong.’ Of course, I got things wrong down the stretch, and it didn’t happen for me. But you just learn from those experiences, and I think the overriding, I guess, emotions are a lot of positives. I would rather you be questioning me about not finishing tournaments off than not questioning me at all about anything. So I’ve obviously shown a lot of really good stuff and put myself in great positions. I’ve said every single time that I just want to put myself there again. I want to give myself another chance. I’ll finish it off at some point. I’ll get it right and I’ll get it right more than once.
“I work really hard on letting things go, moving on. Not that much great comes from those moments of anger, if you like. But like I say, like anybody, I get disappointed. I get frustrated. I get angry. I doubt myself. Of course I do. But it’s all part of being a professional athlete and part of trying to chase your dreams and accomplish great things around unbelievable golfers.”
So it wasn’t a surprise that the man who had been the world’s third-best golfer in 2025 put himself back in contention this week at East Lake, looking to take home the FedEx Cup title with his first PGA Tour win.
He opened with rounds of 63, 64 and 67 to share the 54-hole lead with Patrick Cantlay. Again, Fleetwood put himself in a position to walk through the cauldron and prove that his relentless positivity could blaze a path to his dreams.
Fleetwood’s start Sunday was, by his own admission, “erratic,” but he still built a lead as Cantlay stumbled early. The lead shrank as they made the turn, but then Fleetwood reset, changed his routine, found his swing, and fired darts into the 12th and 13th greens for back-to-back birdies. A bogey at the par-3 15th trimmed his lead, but it grew back to three when Cantlay bogeyed the 16th and Fleetwood took a three-shot lead to the 18th tee to make his waltz into the winner’s circle.
When Fleetwood tapped in for par to finish at 18-under, three shots clear of Cantlay and Russell Henley, he let out a sigh of relief, then shook Cantlay’s hand, hugged his caddie and let out a primal scream toward all the fans who had been trying to will “Tommy Lad” across the line on Sunday at East Lake.
That roar was a release, an admission that this had all weighed on him. How could it not? The weight of expectations can be crippling. The price of allowing yourself to dream is that you risk being shattered, devastated, and must have the resolve to put yourself back together when the pieces are scattered about.
But that primal yell lasted only a few seconds and was quickly replaced by the same smile Fleetwood flashed when talking about his misses, his work, his belief and his dreams. That his post-round interview with NBC’s Cara Banks was filled with the same perspective and levity that propelled him to this point was even more revealing. Tommy Fleetwood has not been covering himself in armor. He has not been removing agency by approaching some of the biggest rounds of his life and admitting it “might be his day or it might not.” The positivity, the perspective, was not a mental tick to protect himself from the reality that disappointment might lurk on the horizon. Instead, it was a freeing release that allowed him to face moments that might bring more destruction and be at peace with whatever outcome fate delivered.
Because, as Tommy Fleetwood told us minutes after all those disappointments, near-misses and close calls washed away and evaporated into the Atlanta air, he had already felt this moment.
“Like I said, I’ve been a PGA Tour winner for a long time. It’s just always been in my mind,” Fleetwood told NBC’s Dan Hicks at the FedEx Cup Trophy presentation on the 18th green.
Call it the power of positive manifestation, dreamcasting, or whatever you like.
Tommy Fleetwood showed us Sunday in Atlanta that there is a strength in positive perspective, in being able to digest your failures and view them not as world-shattering tragedies but as building blocks to a final, desired destination. That there are multiple roads to success.
This is the one he was always going to walk. The only one he knows.
You see, for Tommy Fleetwood, the resilience and the heart have been the point all along. It’s what makes him who he is. It’s what got him to the precipice of where he always believed he would end up, and it’s what finally got him over the line Sunday.
“I think it’s easy for anybody to say that they are resilient, that they bounce back, that they have fight,” Fleetwood said on Sunday with the FedEx Cup Trophy beside him. “It’s different when you actually have to prove it. There’s different types of mental strength. … I’ve had to have mental strength in a different way. I’ve had to be resilient in terms of putting myself back up there, getting myself back in that position, no matter how many times it doesn’t go my way, no matter how many doubts might creep in. Think the right things, say the right things to yourself, say the right things outwardly, and I am really pleased that I can be proof that if you do all the right things and you just keep going that it can happen.”
Finally, for Tommy Fleetwood, his path led him to where he was always headed.