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As Olympics and Presidents Cup loom, Canada's Nick Taylor keeps coming up clutch

Nick Taylor is developing a reputation as one of the PGA Tour's most clutch players, and he's loving it.

Taylor drained an 11-foot putt for birdie on the second playoff hole of the WM Phoenix Open on Sunday to beat American Charley Hoffman for his second victory in nine months.

The fourth win of Taylor's PGA Tour career mirrored his historic victory at the RBC Canadian Open last June, when he sank a 72-foot eagle putt in the fourth round of a playoff against England's Tommy Fleetwood.

"You always relish being in those positions, but being able to pull off shots, now I can draw on that a lot," Taylor, from Abbotsford, B.C., said of his growing confidence. "I want to be in those positions more and more.

"My game has followed that, so hopefully I'm in those positions more and when I get in that kind of spotlight I'm comfortable. The hard part now is getting there as much as I can."

WATCH l Taylor wins Phoenix Open in playoff:

He'll have another chance at being in the spotlight at this week's Genesis Invitational at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif. The 35-year-old Taylor said that he's worked to solidify his game over the past two years.

"Really, since the fall of '22 we had a road map of where we wanted to get to, and since then it hasn't really been changes, it's been sticking to the same things that we know will get me to where I want to be," said Taylor. "It's been the deliberate practice of doing the same boring stuff, which sounds easy at times but sometimes you can wander away.

One thing that hasn't changed for Taylor is his ability to clear his mind and perform under pressure.

As an amateur Taylor won the Canadian Junior in 2006 and the Canadian Amateur Championship in 2007, and after turning

Read more on cbc.ca