Sunday, June 24, 2012

WILLETT WINS FOR FIRST TIME - AFTER FOUR-HOLE PLAY-OFF

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
After 19 top-ten finishes Danny Willett finally claimed his first European Tour title with a nail-biting play-off victory over Marcus Fraser.
Conditions in Cologne may have been wet and windy for the final round, but there was nothing dull about the golf on an absorbing day at Gut Lärchenhof.
In the end Willett required a four-hole play-off down the testing 18th to shake off Fraser, after a final round 73 left him level with the former Ballantine’s Championship winner.
“It’s amazing,” said the former Walker Cup star. “It was a tough day - it was brutal with the wind whipping and it was raining.
“Marcus had a great round today and I hung in there nicely. Hopefully I gave people a good show.
“This week has been strange, I’ve been working really hard with support from my family and my girlfriend. I’ve had some ups and downs in the last 18 months as everyone knows but I’m injury free now and back to playing well and I’d like to thank everyone back home for supporting me.
“I’ll keep working hard and hopefully we can do it again.”

HOME FAVOURITE
Overnight leader Willett was caught by Fraser and home favourite Marcel Siem early in the day, but responded with a couple of birdies at the third and fourth as his nearest challengers struggled around the turn.
But the 24 year old from England drifted back towards the pack with bogeys at the ninth, 11th and 15th in wet and windy conditions, and Fraser got his nose in front with a birdie at the 16th.
The two-time European Tour winner from Australia found trouble at the last, however, and did well to rescue a bogey and set the clubhouse target at 11 under.
Willett needed two pars to force a play-off at that stage, and that appeared unlikely when he drove down the right at the 18th and the ball bounced off a cart path and behind a tree.
But the former Alfred Dunhill Links runner-up swung a remarkable long hooked iron onto the green, and although he left his first putt from 25 feet well short, he converted a four footer for par to force extra holes.
Fraser was 15 feet away in three at the first extra hole but made it to force another trip down the 18th.
WILLETT CHANCE MISSED

When Willett chipped to five feet and Fraser left his effort 20 feet short and missed the par putt it looked like game over, but Willett’s putt somehow stayed up, and so the players returned to the tee.
Both players converted five footers at the third time of asking, and on their fourth visit Willett almost ran a flop from the rough in for birdie and Fraser’s 25 foot putt lipped out.
But Fraser missed his return from three feet, leaving Willett to tap in for victory.
Earlier Willett had knocked in a five footer at the third and struck a precise tee shot to five feet at the short fourth to double his one shot overnight lead.
Siem had begun the final round with a hattrick of birdies, but came unstuck approaching the turn.
The 31 year old from Mettmann – less than an hour’s drive from Gut Lärchenhof – holed an eight footer at the first, a 30 foot putt at the second and chipped to two feet at the long third.
But after three straight pars he went in the hazard twice at the short seventh and ran up a triple bogey six before going in the water again on the eighth and bogeying.

AUSSIE IN WATER
Australian Fraser was also in the water there and bogeyed, having began well with an approach to five feet at the first and two-putt birdie at the third.
Willett’s par putt lipped out at the ninth as he turned in 35, but Fraser also bogeyed there so he was still two clear.
Fraser, looking for his third European Tour title, halved the deficit again with a brilliant 50 foot putt at the 12th, but the Australian was left to rue straying down the right on the 18th in regulation as he took three to reach the green.

Paul McGinley recovered brilliantly from his disappointing third round 77 with a 66 to share third place with England’s Chris Wood and Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castaño on ten under, while Siem fought back brilliantly only to three-putt the last and finish alongside Henrik Stenson on nine under. 
SCOTSWATCH: Paul Lawrie, after trailing his compatriots most of the tournament, finished strongly wiht a 69 for five-under 283 to be the top Scot in T23 place and earn Euros 20,50.
Alistair Forsyth 75 for 290), Peter Whiteford (78 for 291 and Steven O'Hara (80 for 292) all finished disappointingly.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS 
Par 288 (4x72) PRIZEMONEY IN EUROS
277 Danny Willett (England) 65 70 69 73 (333,330) bt Marcus Fraser (Australia) 64 74 68 71 (227,220) at fourth hole of sudden death play-off.
278 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (Spain) 71 69 69 69, Paul McGinley (Ireland) 65 70 77 66, Chris Wood (England) 65 70 70 73 (103,333).
279 Marcel Siem (Germany) 68 71 68 72, Henrik Stenson (Sweden) 70 68 71 70 (65,000).

SCOTS' TOTALS
283 Paul Lawrie 72 70 72 69 (T23) (20,500).
285 Stephen Gallacher 67 73 72 73 (T33) (15,000)
287 David Drysdale 69 70 73 75, Colin Montgomerie 69 74 72 72, Marc Warren 73 70 70 74 (T44) (10,400 each).
290 Alistair Forsyth 69 71 75 75 (T54) (6,500).
291 Peter Whiteford 70 73 70 78 (T60) (5,300)
292 Steven O'Hara 69 72 71 80 (T64) (4,700).

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

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