FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Branden Grace fought off a brave challenge from Denmark’s Thorbjørn
Olesen to win his fifth title of the season at the Alfred Dunhill Links
Championship today.
"It feels awesome," said Grace, who has risen from
outside the Official World Golf Ranking's top 300 to inside the top 40
and might even yet deny Number One McIlroy The Race to Dubai next month.
He is up from 12th to third and added: "It's definitely in my sights."
Grace,
who began the week with a European Tour record-equalling 60 at
Kingsbarns, claimed the €617,283 first prize with a tournament record 22
under par total.
But if starting the final round with a four
stroke lead and ending it two ahead of Dane Olesen sounds a comfortable
day's work, then think again.
After the Pretoria golfer dropped a
shot on the seventh, Olesen birdied the next two and when Grace
three-putted the short 11th for another bogey they were level.
It
was then, however, that he showed the class that had already brought
him the Joburg Open, Volvo Golf Champions, Volvo China Open and, on the
Sunshine Tour last Sunday, the Origins of Golf titles in 2012.
Grace
birdied the following three holes from ten, 12 and 14 feet and when
Olesen bogeyed the next, the gap was back to four – although even then
it was not a cruise to the line.
Olesen birdied the 16th and he
bogeyed the Road Hole 17th, but when the Sicilian Open winner came up a
fraction short with his eagle attempt through the Valley of Sin on the
last, Grace had two putts for victory from four feet - and needed only
one of them.
It made him the first wire-to-wire winner of The European Tour season, but was the second time he has won back-to-back.
Like
Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel, Grace is a product of the Ernie
Els Foundation and the current Open Champion has already tipped him to
be another Major Champion.
Winning at the Home of Golf, as Oosthuizen did in the 2010 Open, will do for the time being, though.
"I've
really dreamt of this moment my whole life," he said. "I had goosebumps
thinking this morning about Louis and the possibility of holding a
trophy here myself.
"It was a tough day, but the putter started working and that's all I needed to do."
Grace's
caddie Zack Rasego was on Oosthuizen's bag two years ago and, after
asking him to start reading the lines with him on the back nine, he took
control again.
Using a new driver after his usual one cracked
last week, Grace shot a closing 70, while Olesen's 68 left him two ahead
of Swede Alex Noren.
Scot Stephen Gallacher, whose only European
Tour victory in nearly 400 starts came in the event eight years ago,
finished in a seven-way tie for fifth after running up a quadruple-bogey
eight at the 16th.
The 37 year old, lying fourth on his own at
the time, went to what he thought was his drive and hit it, only to
discover it was actually the ball of Danny Willett's amateur partner
Steve Halsall.
It cost Gallacher a two stroke penalty and his was then found in the left-hand rough.
"It
never even crossed my mind because he was looking 50 yards further up,”
he said. “Obviously I'm a bit disappointed, but what can you do?"
He also incurred a penalty in Thursday's opening round when, in taking a practice swing, he clipped a divot and it hit his ball.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72) Prize money in Euros
266 Branden Grace (South Africa) 60 67 69 70 (617,284)
268 Thorbjorn Olesen (Denmark) 63 69 68 68 (411,250).
270 Noren Alexander (Sweden) 64 72 65 69 (231,852)
272 Joel Sjoholm (Sweden) 65 67 70 70 (186,135)
SCOTS' TOTALS
273 Stephen Gallacher 67 70 65 71 (T5) (102,222)
276 David Drysdale 66 72 70 68 (T15) (48,254)
279 Scott Jamieson 68 74 68 69, Marc Warren 70 70 69 70 (T34) (24,074)
281 Colin Montgomerie 71 70 69 71 (T55) (11,481)
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