Monday, March 05, 2012

LEFT-HANDED LOAR HOLDS ON TO WIN NATIONWIDE TOUR EVENT

FROM THE US NATIONWIDE TOUR WEBSITE
By Joe Chemycz, Nationwide Tour staff
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Edward Loar rolled in a six-foot par putt on the final Sunday to win the Panama Claro Championship by one stroke over four others. Loar, who held a four-stroke after 54 holes at the Panama Golf Club, gave all of the lead back early and then battled his way to the win despite a 4-over 74.
The 34-year Dallas resident finished at 4-under 276, one better than the quartet of Cameron Percy (67), Ryan Armour (68), Luke List (68) and Brian Smock (69). The win is the first significant win for Loar since he captured the 2004 Korean Open on the Asian Tour. He also collected a first-place cheque for $99,000.
"I really haven't played that good out here," said Loar, who is a rookie on the US PGA Tour this year and will head to the Puerto Rico Open next week. "Hopefully this will give me some gratification that I actually belong out here."
Loar certainly made Sunday's finale interesting. The big-hitting lefty stretched his lead to five shots early with a birdie at No. 4 and appeared to be on cruise control.
"Yeah, I was nervous," he said. "It was the first time in a while that I'd been in the lead, especially on a stage like this. I think anybody that said they weren't is crazy. On a course like this anything can happen as it's shown all week. Unfortunately it came up and bit me a couple of times."
Loar three-putted the par-3, 6th hole to fall to 7-under but was still in control. The wheels came off at No. 7 when he pushed his tee shot into the water and eventually three-putted for a triple-bogey 7.
"The triple was just bad shots followed by bad shots. I was thinking I was glad I had a four-shot lead to start with," he said with a chuckle. "I obviously let a lot of people back in the tournament, but that's why you play 72 holes."
With Loar in full reverse, several made small charges up the board.
Percy polished off a bogey-free weekend with a 3-under 67 was the first in the clubhouse at 3-under.
"Absolutely I thought I'd have a chance today," said Percy, who was eight back to start. "Once the wind was up I thought I could win because I knew how hard it was going to be to hold onto a lead out there. It's hard to hold on."
Percy waited and hoped for the tournament's second playoff in the nine-year history.
Armour had got to five-under with a birdie at No. 13 but stumbled with a pair of bogeys down the stretch, including one at 18. He was seven back to start the day.
"There's always a chance on this golf course," he said. "We all try to play as many bogey-free rounds as we can out here and this is a golf course where you jump up the leaderboard if you do it."
Armour's par putt on 18 hung on the lip but refused to drop, leaving him at 3-under as well.
Next it was List's turn. He rolled in a 10-foot birdie putt at No. 18 to make it three at 3-under.
Smock made it a quartet with a birdie-par finish.
At that point, Loar was also at 3-under and in a five-way tie for the lead.
When he absolutely needed, Loar stepped up. He rolled in a 25-foot birdie putt from the fringe to regain the lead.
"I knew what it meant," he said.
After a routine at the short, par-3, 17th he needed only a par to win but his tee shot on the 465-yard hole clipped a tre and left with 240 yards to the pin.
"I just tried to put myself in a place where I could get it up-and-down," he said. "I didn't think I had a chance for the green. I just hit a really good chip shot."
"I just tried to stick to my routine and I hit it right in the middle," he said. "I really struggled. I had pretty good control and then a couple of slip ups, followed by another slip-up and all of a sudden it was tight and I really had to fight and dig deep. I made some unbelievable up-and-downs coming in to win this tournament."
Aberdeen-born Australian Michael Sim improved from T85 to T43 over the final round. He had scores of 76, 68, 73 and 69 for 286.

Fourth-Round Notes
• Sunday's weather: Mostly sunny and windy. High of 92. Winds N 10-20 mph.
• Edward Loar's winning score of 276 was the second-highest in tournament history. Scott Dunlap was 3-under when he won in 2008.
• With his win Edward Loar becomes only the sixth left-handed winner in Nationwide Tour history.

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