Sunday, November 01, 2009

Ross Fisher beats Anthony Kim 4 and 3 in 36-hole

final of Volvo world match-play championship

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Berkshire-born Ross Fisher completed a memorable marathon effort by beating American Ryder Cup player Anthony Kim to win the Volvo world match play championship in Spain today.
The 28 year old from Ascot - a member at the Wentworth club - with high hopes of making his own Ryder Cup debut in Wales next October, won the 36-hole final by 4 and 3 after playing an amazing 126 holes in four days.
Fisher's success stopped Kim, 24 in June, eclipsing Seve Ballesteros as the prestigious event's youngest ever winner.
And it also means, while the tournament has now left Wentworth after being staged there from 1964 until two years ago, the trophy is going straight back.
Fisher, a member at the Surrey club since his boyhood days, is up to a career-best 17th in the World Rankings as a result.
Earning a cheque for €750,000 also takes last year's European Open champion to fourth on this season's Race to Dubai and he could go top by winning the HSBC Champions in Shanghai next Sunday.
"I'm absolutely ecstatic," he said. "It's been a long, gruelling week, but obviously very worthwhile.
"This course was very physically demanding and I don't think I am the fittest of blokes out here. I know I need to work a lot more in the gym.
"The only thing that's been missing this year was a win. I feel I've been very consistent and to be the leading guy in the Majors (in terms of shots taken) shows my golf has been very good."
After coming close to winning the US Open Championship and then leading The Open Championship early on the final day - his hopes crashed with a quadruple-bogey 8 - Fisher became a father for the first time a week later.
Fisher had come through the semi-finals by overcoming Masters Tournament champion Angel Cabrera at the third extra hole (the 39th) and was never behind in the final from the moment he birdied the first.
"I think this format suits me," he continued. "I'm quite an aggressive player and sometimes it's caught me out in the past but the best player in the world is an aggressive player and he hasn't done too badly.
"That's where I draw inspiration from - try to be aggressive but smart as well."
It was a policy that paid dividends on the 22nd and 23rd.
First he drove to the back of the green on the 334 yard par four and holed a35 footer for eagle, then he two-putted the next for a birdie that took him three clear after Kim had opened the door by driving up against rocks.
Kim responded straightaway with a 15 foot putt but was kicking himself for three-putting the following two holes - the second after missing from less than two feet.
Fisher, who missed from three feet and duffed a chip on the same two, was then in danger of losing the 27th but made a 20 footer with his opponent only five feet away. It was halved in birdies.
Kim's duffed chip on the next did prove costly and he went four down with four to play when Fisher birdied the 32nd after a pitch to five feet.
The Los Angeles golfer may not have realised when he had beaten Sergio Garcia at the Ryder Cup last year, but he knew when he had lost this match. It came when Fisher matched his par 4 on the next.
Some of the best golf of the day actually came in the 18-hole third place play-off, where Robert Allenby beat Cabrera at the first extra hole.
Allenby holed in one with a five wood to the 230 yard sixth, was one down with one to play, birdied the par five last for a matching eight under par 64 - and then made an 18 footer for eagle when they went into sudden death.
His reward was a cheque for €250,000 and Cabrera, runner-up to Ernie Els two years ago, took away €200,000.

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