ATLANTA — A stepson in tears, a cathartic yell, and a long-awaited — and very large — trophy: It was all happening for Tommy Fleetwood on the 18th green at East Lake on Sunday evening. The scene was exactly what Fleetwood had earned, and it was exactly what he deserved.

Fleetwood was a PGA Tour winner at last. Through all the close calls, all the “what ifs” and all the smiles while fielding the same old questions, Fleetwood did it. He won the Tour Championship and the 2025 FedEx Cup.

On Sunday, Fleetwood wasn’t just a winner on tour, he was the winner on tour.

Fleetwood had surmised about this outcome earlier in the week. And the prospect made the Englishman break out in a cheeky grin: “I think it would be pretty funny if I won this week and then got the FedEx Cup as well,” Fleetwood said.

Sometimes, things just have a funny way of working themselves out. For Fleetwood and his painstaking pursuit to win his first PGA Tour event, it was only a matter of time. And it was always going to feel like a deep sigh of relief, the kind that ultimately results in some hearty laughter. How fitting.

“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,” Fleetwood said. “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.”

Until that final tap-in putt dropped on the last green, Fleetwood did not want to let himself think about what could become of this day. Even when he stepped up to the 18th tee with a three-shot lead over his closest pursuer, Patrick Cantlay, it was not over. Fleetwood knows from experience how small that margin can feel with everything on the line.

“I had to really work hard at it,” he said. “When you’ve had as many near misses as I’ve had, a three-shot lead doesn’t feel like that many even on a par-5.”

But after closing the tournament with a routine par, Fleetwood picked his ball out of the cup, lifted his arms and let out that ephemeral scream. He could finally release all of the tension, and yes, that part of his story was over.

IT HAPPENED! TOMMY FLEETWOOD IS A PGA TOUR WINNER! pic.twitter.com/9A5BA5NQMo

— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) August 24, 2025

Fleetwood could turn to his caddie, Ian Finnis, for a bear hug. He could direct his gaze to Oscar, his stepson, letting out all his emotions. And he could embrace his European PGA Tour peers — Justin Rose, Shane Lowry and Harry Hall — who all waited in front of the clubhouse to congratulate him.

“I’ve got goosebumps,” Rose said, shortly before heading up to the balcony of East Lake’s clubhouse, where he picked up a FaceTime call from Fleetwood’s 7-year-old son, Frankie, who went viral for a deeply honest interview during the Masters’ Par 3 Contest in April. Rose turned the phone, showing Frankie’s face to the fans congregating down below. The crowd erupted in applause.

There’s a reason why the outcome of this 30-man, no-cut event felt like a win for all. It’s also why Caitlin Clark, LeBron James and Tiger Woods all felt compelled to turn to social media on Sunday evening to publicly follow Fleetwood’s charge to victory. Fleetwood’s arc, with 30 top-five finishes in eight years on the PGA Tour but zero wins, has been a relatable one because of how difficult it often felt to watch.

In his last six starts on the PGA Tour, Fleetwood has held three leads or co-leads after 54 holes.

The first came in Hartford, Conn., at the Travelers Championship in June, where Fleetwood gave the tournament away with a painfully sloppy bogey on the 18th hole in the face of a late run from Keegan Bradley. The second came in Memphis at the FedEx Cup St. Jude Championship two weeks ago, where Rose and J.J. Spaun went out and earned themselves spots in a sudden-death playoff, while Fleetwood let his form slowly slip away on the final stretch.

Fleetwood always promised he’d walk away from those near-misses with only positive thoughts guiding him forward. Fleetwood was undoubtedly persevering, but was he learning? How many heartbreaks would it take?

The 34-year-old could feel his swing slipping once again on the front nine on Sunday. Even as Cantlay struggled out of the gates, and Scottie Scheffler hit a ball out of bounds off the first tee, Fleetwood hit a poor drive on No. 5, another one on No. 8, and then a hook on No. 10 tee that resulted in a bogey. Fleetwood’s past may have begun to creep in, but this time, he didn’t let it overwhelm him. Because he stuck to his plan.

Process over the prize

Finnis, Fleetwood’s long-time friend and caddie, wrote those four words in his yardage book this week in Atlanta. As much as the close calls have weighed on Fleetwood, they’ve also weighed on his looper, who has been with him through it all. At the Travelers, Fleetwood stood in the 18th fairway with a yardage that was a lot for one club, and a little for another. Fleetwood was stuck between distances, and while Finnis swears that neither of them was to blame for the eventual club-choice error, the caddie kicked himself over the mistake for weeks.

That’s when Finnis vowed to preach one thing to his player, and to himself: commitment.

“Scottie talks about it. Rory talks about it, and it’s true,” Finnis said, watching Fleetwood accept the FedEx Cup trophy. “And this week it was one of the main things we thought about, just process. There’s no prizes at the end. Just keep doing the right thing on every shot. It doesn’t matter if it’s to win the tournament, or if it’s the first shot on Thursday. As cliché as it sounds.”

Fleetwood, left, and Finnis had a plan for the Tour Championship. (Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Fleetwood couldn’t help but catch Finnis’ eye as he stood stationary on the 18th green, cheeks growing sore, as the groups of tournament organizers, volunteers, sponsors and PGA Tour executives filtered in and out of frame for photo opportunities with the winner. Fleetwood longed to take a few snaps with the team that helped get him there. Finnis longed for a beer.

But Fleetwood wasn’t even close to being released onward for his 10:20 p.m. red-eye flight back home to England. He stopped for TV interviews, a clubhouse toast, a press conference in the media tent, and a photoshoot with a vintage Coca-Cola vending machine, which is part of Fleetwood’s winner’s prize this week — along with a $10 million check.

“How cool is this?” Fleetwood said, crossing one leg over the other, and leaning on the metal structure with yet another expansive grin.

The cameras kept running and the flashes kept illuminating the Sunday evening sky as Fleetwood traveled from stop to stop, saying all the things, over and over, that would make one think it had started to register: That just happened.

Fleetwood spoke of his story of perseverance. He emphasized the circle of support around him. He admitted that he was just glad his tee shot on the par-3 15th found dry land. And he reflected on the many moments of self-doubt that led to this, finally completing the task that everyone wanted for him.

But Fleetwood knows. Despite the congratulatory messages, the repeated hoisting of his new piece of hardware and the sea of fans that surrounded him on that 18th green, it might take some time for it all to hit.

“Winning doesn’t sink in for a while,” Fleetwood said. “But what an amazing day.”

(Top photo: Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)