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Until Sunday, he was best known as the guy who did the “Gangnam Style” dance before the crazies on the 16th hole at Phoenix. On Sunday, he was amazed and humbled at what hit him at Riviera just as the Academy Awards was getting started.

His story is fit for Hollywood.

Hahn once sold shoes at a high-end department store to make a living. He was on the verge of giving up on golf in 2008 when he was down to his last $200 and decided then to work a little harder. And he then he won a PGA Tour event in a playoff over Johnson and Paul Casey, weaving his way through traffic on the back nine in which seven players had at least a share of the lead.

“I never would have thought I would win this tournament,” Hahn said.

Doug Ferguson, The Associated Press

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“Patience,” DeLaet responded. “I’ve slept on either leads or final group pairings before and I know, like, laying in bed, you’re thinking about what a win can do and this and that. I’m past that now in my career.”

He also said, of the challenge of playing at a dry, fast, Riviera Country Club, “You have to get a good start out here.”

Cue the ominous music and the thunderclap.

DeLaet, the 33-year-old from Weyburn, Sask., who has for a couple of years looked liked the Canadian most likely to become a full-on PGA star, followed an opening birdie on Sunday with a double-bogey on the second hole and a bogey on the third. He started the day two shots behind leader Retief Goosen, and before he had teed off on the fourth hole, he was five shots back, dropped off the first page of the leaderboard and relegated to a role on the CBS broadcast that only saw him get camera time if he happened to walk into the frame while they were paying attention to one of his playing partners. Meanwhile, 2005 broke out on the leaderboard, with Goosen trading the lead with Sergio Garcia and, Vijay Singh (!) and Paul Casey (!!), among others.