JUSTIN ROSE 62 TAKES HIM TO FRONT IN DUBAI FINAL ROUND
EARLY REPORT FROM EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
iT WAS advantage Rory McIlroy with nine holes to play in The European Tour's season-ending DP World Tour Championship.
The World Number One resumed tied for the lead with Luke Donald and it was the World Number Two who started the better, grabbing a birdie on the long second after McIlroy had pushed his opening drive and bogeyed.
But then came Donald's first bogey not only of the tournament, but in 103 holes on the Earth Course, when he three-putted the third.
McIlroy birdied the fifth and seventh, had another bogey at the next, but closed the outward half with a brilliant approach to two feet.
Already with The Race to Dubai title in the bag, the 23 year old started for home 18 under par, with Donald one behind and England's Justin Rose and South African Louis Oosthuizen two back.
Earlier Spain's Sergio Garcia equalled the course record of 64 for the second time in the week - he eagled the par five 18th again to do it - while Scot Stephen Gallacher and Dutchman Joost Luiten had holes-in-one at the fourth and sixth respectively.
It was suddenly all change at the top when Rose, six behind at the start of the day, followed his sixth birdie on the short 13th with an approach to the 626 yard 14th that curled round to within five feet of the hole.
In it went for eagle and he was 19 under, one ahead of McIlroy and two in front of Donald, who both missed birdie chances on the tenth.
McIlroy was back on terms after hitting in close on the 401 yard 11th, but Rose nosed ahead again with an eight footer on the 15th.
He needed only three closing pars for a new course record of 63, but that was probably not going to bring him the title and so he was looking to pick up more shots.
Donald missed the green on the 12th and by bogeying fell four behind and into a tie for third with Oosthuizen.
Rose parred the 16th and 17th and his lead went to two when McIlroy three-putted the 13th.
By chipping close for birdie on the next, however, the gap was back to one as Rose came to the par five last requiring a par for a course record 63.
Donald and Oosthuizen were three back after birdies on the 14th.
Rose sent his second shot to the back of the green around 100 feet from the flag and his eagle attempt looked as if it might die on a ridge, but then trickled down to the side of the hole.
He gave a fist pump before tapping in for birdie and a 62, a course record by two and his lowest-ever European Tour round by two.
McIlroy, though, pitched to three feet on the 15th and by holing was only one behind again.
EARLIER REPORT
Scotland's Stephen Gallacher followed three opening birdies with a hole-in-one on the final day of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai this morning (local time).
Gallacher aced the 214 yard fourth with a five iron to be five under par for his first four holes and after another birdie at the long seventh turned in a brilliant 30.
It moved him up from 31st to joint fifth on 12 under par, still five adrift of overnight leaders Rory McIlroy and Luke Donald, and made him the latest player to threaten the course record of 64.
Five players had achieved that mark prior to this week and Sergio Garcia and Jeev Milkha Singh added their names to the list in the second and third rounds respectively.
LIVE SCORING FROM FINAL ROUND IN DUBAI
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Luke Donald birdied the 2nd, bogeyed the third to be -17
Louise Oosthuizen birdied the first and second to be -16
Rory McIlroy bogeyed the first to be -16
iT WAS advantage Rory McIlroy with nine holes to play in The European Tour's season-ending DP World Tour Championship.
The World Number One resumed tied for the lead with Luke Donald and it was the World Number Two who started the better, grabbing a birdie on the long second after McIlroy had pushed his opening drive and bogeyed.
But then came Donald's first bogey not only of the tournament, but in 103 holes on the Earth Course, when he three-putted the third.
McIlroy birdied the fifth and seventh, had another bogey at the next, but closed the outward half with a brilliant approach to two feet.
Already with The Race to Dubai title in the bag, the 23 year old started for home 18 under par, with Donald one behind and England's Justin Rose and South African Louis Oosthuizen two back.
Earlier Spain's Sergio Garcia equalled the course record of 64 for the second time in the week - he eagled the par five 18th again to do it - while Scot Stephen Gallacher and Dutchman Joost Luiten had holes-in-one at the fourth and sixth respectively.
It was suddenly all change at the top when Rose, six behind at the start of the day, followed his sixth birdie on the short 13th with an approach to the 626 yard 14th that curled round to within five feet of the hole.
In it went for eagle and he was 19 under, one ahead of McIlroy and two in front of Donald, who both missed birdie chances on the tenth.
McIlroy was back on terms after hitting in close on the 401 yard 11th, but Rose nosed ahead again with an eight footer on the 15th.
He needed only three closing pars for a new course record of 63, but that was probably not going to bring him the title and so he was looking to pick up more shots.
Donald missed the green on the 12th and by bogeying fell four behind and into a tie for third with Oosthuizen.
Rose parred the 16th and 17th and his lead went to two when McIlroy three-putted the 13th.
By chipping close for birdie on the next, however, the gap was back to one as Rose came to the par five last requiring a par for a course record 63.
Donald and Oosthuizen were three back after birdies on the 14th.
Rose sent his second shot to the back of the green around 100 feet from the flag and his eagle attempt looked as if it might die on a ridge, but then trickled down to the side of the hole.
He gave a fist pump before tapping in for birdie and a 62, a course record by two and his lowest-ever European Tour round by two.
McIlroy, though, pitched to three feet on the 15th and by holing was only one behind again.
EARLIER REPORT
Scotland's Stephen Gallacher followed three opening birdies with a hole-in-one on the final day of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai this morning (local time).
Gallacher aced the 214 yard fourth with a five iron to be five under par for his first four holes and after another birdie at the long seventh turned in a brilliant 30.
It moved him up from 31st to joint fifth on 12 under par, still five adrift of overnight leaders Rory McIlroy and Luke Donald, and made him the latest player to threaten the course record of 64.
Five players had achieved that mark prior to this week and Sergio Garcia and Jeev Milkha Singh added their names to the list in the second and third rounds respectively.
LIVE SCORING FROM FINAL ROUND IN DUBAI
CLICK HERE
Luke Donald birdied the 2nd, bogeyed the third to be -17
Louise Oosthuizen birdied the first and second to be -16
Rory McIlroy bogeyed the first to be -16
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