Monday, March 10, 2014

BIRDIES AT LAST TWO HOLES DECIDE US PGA TOUR EVENT AT SAN JUAN

HADLEY WINS PUERTO RICO OPEN 

WITH KIWI LEE RUNNER-UP

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
RIO GRANDE, Puerto Rico (AP) -- Chesson Hadley dreamed about a day like this as a child -- other than the tossing and turning in bed and queasy stomach.
"I was so nervous," Hadley said Sunday after winning the Puerto Rico Open for his first US PGA Tour victory. "I did not eat well last night. I did not eat well this morning."
The American held off New ZealanderDanny Lee by two strokes in wind gusting to 25 mph at Trump International.
"I wasn't vomiting or anything, but there were a couple of times where I felt nauseous out on the course," Hadley said. 
"I went to bed. I watched maybe three minutes of the Duke-Carolina game. I fell right asleep and I woke up ready to go about 5:30, 6, and I never really went back to sleep, just kind of tossed and turned. "
Making his 13th PGA TOUR start, the 26-year-old Hadley birdied the final two holes for a 5-under 67. He's the first rookie winner since Jordan Spieth in July in the John Deere Classic.
"It's incredible. It's a dream come true," Hadley said. "This is what you dream of as a 6-year-old out in the bunker, hitting bunker shots on the range.
"It hasn't sunk in yet. It'll be nice to sleep on it and wake up in the morning knowing I'm a PGA TOUR champion and nobody can ever take that away from me."
Hadley finished at 21-under 267 and earned $630,000, a two-year tour exemption and spots in THE PLAYERS Championship, PGA Championship and Hyundai Tournament of Champions. He will move into the mid-60s in the world ranking, giving him a chance to get into the Masters if he can crack the top 50 at the end of the Valero Texas Open.
"It opens up a lot of doors," Hadley said. "It guarantees me a major appearance. I've never played in a major before."
He birdied three of the first five holes, chipping in on the par-5 fifth.
"It's all about the start and I got off to a great start," Hadley said. "Probably the shot that won me the tournament was the chip in on 5. I mean I was dead over there and I hit the nastiest little nipper over there, and it snuck in the left door."
Lee birdied three of the last four holes for a 68. The South Korean-born New Zealander won the 2008 U.S. Amateur and also has European and Web.com victories.
"I really felt like I did my best. I gave it my best, but Chesson was just playing rock solid," Lee said. "He made a couple of good up-and-downs from bad tee shots. When he plays like that, it's just really hard to catch. He just didn't make any silly mistakes at all."
Hadley won twice last year on the Web.com Tour, taking the Rex Hospital Open in his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina, and the season-ending Web.com Tour Championship.
In Raleigh, the former Georgia Tech player began the final round five strokes behind Lee and closed with a 64 for a two-stroke victory.
"The two wins last year, that helps a lot because you're there, you've learned how to win, you learn how not to choke, and there's a lot going on," Hadley said.
Ben Martin shot a 66 to finish third at 17 under.
"I'm very happy with the way I played today," Martin said. "Just kind of get back out there, get the juices flowing a little bit. Really, the first time that I've had that this year."
David Toms was another stroke back along with Carl Pettersson, Jason Gore, Wes Roach and Richard H. Lee. Roach and Lee shot 67, Toms and Pettersson 69, and Gore 70.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72) players from USA unless stated
267 Chesson Hadley 68 65 67 67
269 Danny Lee (NZ) 67 68 66 68
271 Ben Martin 68 67 70 66
272 Wes Roach 69 66 70 67, Richard H Lee 69 68 68 67, David Toms 72 64 67 69, Carl Pettersson (Sweden) 71 66 66 69, Jason Gore 67 69 66 70

SELECTED TOTALS
276 Robert Karlsson (Sweden) 71 67 6969 (T14)
278 Greg Owen (England) 69 67 71 71, Raf Cabrera-Bello (Spain) 69 67 68 74 (T24)
279 Nicolas Colsaerts (Belgium) 70 68 73 67, David Skinns (England) 74 66 71 68 (T29)
282 John Daly 74 69 67 72 (T49) 

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

CLICK HERE

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