3/02/2015

Classic Harrington Wins Honda

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Padraig Harrington overturned a four-shot final day deficit to snatch a dramatic victory at the second play-off hole of a rain-delayed Honda Classic.

After bad weather had forced the tournament into a fifth day, Harrington, without a PGA Tour title since a two-stroke win at the 2008 PGA Championship, sank a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th to finish level on six-under with rookie Daniel Berger and force a play-off.

The pair both two-putted the first extra hole at the 18th for par, before Harrington nailed his tee-shot at the 17th to within five-feet of the hole as Berger found the hazard. With the American only able to double-bogey, Harrington took two attempts from five feet to end his title drought and book his ticket to next month's Masters. 

Earlier, Harrington had struck four birdies in a row to move in to the clubhouse lead, missing a 10-foot putt at the 15th for a fifth successive gain. The Irishman had lost his advantage with a double-bogey at the penultimate hole when his tee-shot flew into the water hazard, but sank a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th to force a play-off.

Berger, nine shots adrift heading in to the final round, had fired back-to-back birdies to close with an impressive six-under 64. 

Poulter, searching for a first stroke-play win in America, opened the day by rolling in a birdie at the 8th before missing an 11-foot putt for a further gain at the following hole.

Reaching the turn two clear, the world No 36 opened up the top of the leaderboard with a double-bogey at the 11th, finding the water with his second shot and then two-putting from 15-feet.

The Englishman was unfortunate again at the 13th when, from 120 yards, his second shot from the fairway bunker rattled the flag and spun away, with the resulting 15-foot birdie putt rolling alongside the hole.

Things went from bad to worse for Poulter at the next when, after taking a drop out of water following a wayward tee-shot, his third shot from the dirt ricocheting off a palm tree and ended back in the lake. After seeing his fifth shot fall in to a deep bunker, Poulter had to settle for triple-bogey.

With others faltering around him, Poulter ended positively with back-to-back birdies to end tied-third alongside British duo Russell Knox and Paul Casey

Overnight joint-leader Casey picked up an early birdie at the ninth, before dropping shots with an eight-foot missed putt at 11 and a tee-shot into a bunker at 14. Needing to pick up a stroke at the 18th to move joint-leader, Casey played his third shot out of the bunker to within 20-feet of the hole but saw his birdie-putt slow up inches short. 

Despite carding three bogeys in his final round, Knox ended strongly to post a two-under 68, while Jamie Donaldson made three late gains to finish a further shot back, with a three-putt from 50-feet at the 16th his only blemish.




Phelan on Fast Track in Joburg

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Kevin Phelan went within two strokes of his first victory as a professional and, one third of a world ranking point away from winning a coveted ticket to July's Open Championship at St Andrews.

At least the rising Waterford star clinched his place in this week's Africa Open in East London with the sparkling final-round 66 on Royal Johannesburg's East Course, ensuring his best finish in 18 months as a pro in a five-way tie for second on 15-under at the Joburg Open, two behind Andy Sullivan.

The top three not already exempt for The Open qualified for St Andrews but in the event of a tie, the positions go to the highest world-ranked players. In this instance, English duo David Howell (WR 158) and Anthony Wall (WR 312), the latter was .2729 of a point ahead of Phelan (WR 511) in last Monday's rankings.

Still, the €80,600 cheque Phelan banked yesterday, when added to the €11,250 he won in December's Alfred Dunhill Championship, eased the 24-year-old inside the top-50 in the Race to Dubai.

He's played just three events since losing his European Tour card last year, a share of third at October's Hong Kong Open being his best result since turning pro after the 2013 Walker Cup. Phelan finished 129th on the 2014 Order of Merit then missed out on his card in 65th at Q-School.

So the opportunity to play again this week is a massive boost for the rock-solid Irishman, giving him a chance to build on momentum gained.

"I was just plodding along the first three days and played some nice golf and didn't hole many putts," Phelan said. "But I got the putts to drop on the front nine today and am delighted with how I played."

A closing 66 landed Englisman Sullivan (28) his second win this year in Johannesburg after his maiden success in January's South African Open. South Africans Wallie Coetsee and Jaco Van Zyl also tied second.