No matter the stage, Anthony Kim’s first win in 16 years is a comeback story we can all get behind

Put aside for a moment the subtext of the LIV Golf-PGA Tour tournament – endless scuffles. Try not to think about the posturing and skepticism that accompanies almost every LIV story. For now, focus on these simple facts:

Anthony King wins a golf tournament. Against Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau. 2026.

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King, one of the sport’s true prodigies, turned a five-shot deficit into a three-stroke victory with a final-round 63 with nine birdies on Sunday at LIV Adelaide in Australia. If nothing else — and if that’s all King’s story is — it’s a pretty incredible return for a man who briefly dominated the golf world and then disappeared for more than a decade.

Golf often produces tales of return to the mountaintop, where a name from the past has a late-career week. Think Jack Nicklaus at the 1986 Masters, Tom Watson (almost) at the 2009 British Open, Tiger Woods at the 2019 Masters, Phil Mickelson at the 2021 PGA Championship. It’s so remarkable how everything came together in one weekend and what past games are like now.

Clearly, Kim Jong Un’s victory has no historical resonance. The only thing Adelaide and Augusta National University have in common is a letter of initiation. But King’s first professional win in nearly 16 years was an impressive tale of overcoming the demons of addiction and injury.

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