A tight race through 54 holes at the 2008 John Deere Classic remained that way through the final round, as Kenny Perry, Brad Adamonis and Jay Williamson battled back and forth at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Ill. The trio eventually ended in a playoff, with Perry winning on the first extra hole. The victory denied both Adamonis and Williamson their first TOUR victory but helped make up for the close call Perry had in 1994 when he finished second at this event behind Mark McCumber.

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Perry comes into the tournament on a hot streak, winning in his most recent start at the Travelers Championship two weeks ago. He also won the FBR Open earlier this season and now sits second in the FedExCup standings.
This is the 10th year the John Deere Classic has been held at TPC Deere Run. Besides Perry, three other players currently in the top 10 of the FedExCup standings are in the field. Zach Johnson is third, Steve Stricker is fifth and U.S. Open champ Lucas Glover is seventh.
THE GOLDEN YEARS: With his win at the 2008 John Deere Classic, Kenny Perry became the first player age 45 and over since Julius Boros in 1967 to win three PGA TOUR tournaments in a year. Boros was 47 years, 3 months, 8 days when he won the 1967 Buick Open Invitational, his third win of that season.
OPEN SUCCESS STORY: Despite the playoff loss to Kenny Perry in 2008, Jay Williamson earned and accepted a spot in the British Open as the top-five finisher in the event not previously exempt for the British Open. Since Williamson (69) and Adamonis (70) tied for second place, the players' final-round scores were used to determine who would get the invitation. It marked the fourth major championship of Williamson's career and his first since the 2003 U.S. Open. He tied for 39th at Royal Birkdale.
DOUBLE DIGIT STREAK: Last year, for the 33rd consecutive time, the winning score at the John Deere Classic was in double digits (16-under 268). The winning score has failed to reach double digits only three times in the event's 38-year history. It happened in 1975 when Roger Maltbie finished at 5 under. Deane Beman was also 5 under in 1972, a year after the former PGA TOUR commissioner won an unofficial event with a 7-under score.
PLAYER NOTES: The John Deere Classic has featured 18 first-time winners in the tournament's history, the last being John Senden (2006). Since 2000, there have been five first-time winners: Michael Clark II (2000), David Gossett (2001), Mark Hensby (2004), Sean O'Hair (2005) and Senden (2006).
J.P. Hayes, the 2002 John Deere Classic champion, was the only past champion of the John Deere Classic to post a top-10 finish in 2008. Hayes tied for ninth.
Defending champion Perry has his work cut out for him in 2009. David Frost (1992-93) and Beman (1971-72) are the only players to successfully defend their John Deere Classic titles.
Perry became just the fourth player to hold or share the third-round lead and go on to victory since the John Deere Classic moved to the TPC Deere Run in 2000. He was the first to do it since Senden held the lead in 2006 on the way to his win. Gossett (2001) and Hayes (2002) are the other two players to do so.
ON-COURSE OBSERVATIONS: PGA TOUR Network correspondent Brett Wright is on the scene in Silvis, Ill.., for this week's satellite radio coverage (XM 146/SIRIUS 209). Reports Wright:

The John Deere Classic this week will be played on a saturated TPC Deere Run layout. Kenny Perry is back to defend his title, which he won in a playoff in 2008 against Brad Adamonis and Jay Williamson. Kenny, propelled by the momentum of winning the Travelers Championship, says he loves this golf course and feels like this is a home-course advantage for him.
David Duval is in this very strong field fresh off his tie for second at the U.S. Open, along with Lucas Glover, who won at Bethpage.
On a sad note, Jonathan Byrd's father passed away Tuesday after a long battle with cancer, and Jonathan has withdrawm from the tournament. On Thursday, after their rounds, Glover, Charles Warren, D.J. Trahan and Davis Love III are flying a charter to Columbia, S.C., for the memorial for Jonathan's father and then flying back to Illinois for the second round.
Look for long hitters like Steve Marino, Robert Garrigus, Davis Love III and even journeyman Tommy Gainey to have the advantage with their long ball flight off the tee on a golf course that will be surrendering very little roll. But don't count out Perry, who is certainly long enough to run like a "Deere."
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