THAILANDER MAKES KING'S CUP HIS FIRST ASIAN TOUR TITLE
AND THE WINNER IS ... Arnond Vongvanij
NEWS RELEASE FROM ASIAN TOUR
NEWS RELEASE FROM ASIAN TOUR
Khon
Kaen, Thailand: Thailand’s Arnond Vongvanij showed that he
can match up against the region’s biggest names when posted a flawless
eight-under-par 64 to clinch his maiden Asian Tour title at the King’s
Cup today.
Although
the 23-year-old is only playing in his rookie season on the Asian Tour,
Arnond displayed the form of a seasoned professional to pip veterans
Mardan Mamat of Singapore and Thailand’s Thaworn Wiratchant to the title
with his winning total of 22-under-par 266 at the Singha Park Khon Kaen Golf Club.
Despite
missing out on his fourth win of the season, Thaworn took consolation
that he now leads the Asian Tour Order of Merit with his tied-second
place finish alongside Mardan after the duo closed with matching 268s.
Defending
champion Udorn Duangdecha of Thailand had to settle for equal fourth
alongside compatriot Thammanoon Sriroj after he signed off with a 67 at
the King’s Cup which is the third last event on the 2012 Asian Tour
Schedule.
After
four top-10s this season, Arnond finally earned his career breakthrough
in the most deserving way when he held off the combined challenges of
Thaworn and Mardan who have a total of 18 Asian Tour victories between
themselves.
Starting
his final round three shots back of overnight leader Mardan, Arnond
birdied holes two, seven, eight and nine to turn in 32.
He continued his birdie run on the 11th, 14th and 16th holes.
However with Mardan continuing to share the lead with Arnond right up to the 16th hole, the pivotal moment in the round would come at the par-three 17th when Arnond drained a 10-feet birdie putt to take the outright lead.
“I
just kept playing one shot at a time and it was really a close fight
all the way as Mardan was also making birdies. It was tough not to feel
any pressure and I tried to steady my nerves after every hole,” said
Arnond.
Arnond survived a scare on the closing 18th
when his approach shot missed the green and landed in the rough. The
Thai, however managed to save par by chipping his shot to within
five-feet of the pin for his maiden win.
“This
win means a lot to me as I now have a two-year winner’s exemption and I
can focus on playing well at the every tournament that I take part in,”
said Arnond, who holds a finance degree and is nicknamed ‘Bank’ because
he was born the day after his mother took her Masters final examination
in financial banking.
Mardan
started off convincingly with an eagle-three on the third hole. He
bogeyed the fifth but recovered well with birdies on the 10, 12 and 15
holes.
A poor tee shot on the 17th proved costly for Mardan as he went on to bogey the hole, dropping to 20-under.
The
Singaporean then had to eagle his last to force a play-off with Arnond
but he could only manage to reach the green in three and eventually
settled for a par.
“I played really steady golf today except on the 17th
where I had a bad swing. But other than that, it was okay. It was just
tough with everyone chasing you down for the lead,” said Mardan.
“I’m
very pleased with the way I putted and that’s the positive that I can
take from my performance this week. Hopefully I can carry that over to
the last two events,” added Mardan.
Thaworn, meanwhile tipped his hat to Arnond whom he felt was the deserving winner.
“Arnond
played well today and he deserves to win. He played really good golf
and to finish with a 64 is a good effort from a young man like him,”
said Thaworn.
The
15-time Asian Tour winner then issued an ominous warning to his rivals
in the Order of Merit race after he regained pole position.
“I’m
beginning to believe that I can win the Order of Merit for the second
time. There’re still two more events to play and I’m confident of doing
well,” said Thaworn.
James Byrne and Ross Bain, the only two Scots in the field, finished T46 and 67th respectively. Byrne shot 70 69, 73 and 70 for joint 46th place on six-under 282 and earned $2,700.
Bain finished T67 with scores of 70, 70, 75 and 75 for a total of two-over 290.
Bain finished T67 with scores of 70, 70, 75 and 75 for a total of two-over 290.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72) Yardage 7,418
266 Arnond VONGVANIJ (THA) 65-70-67-64.
268 Thaworn WIRATCHANT (THA) 69-66-65-68, Mardan MAMAT (SIN) 63-70-66-69.
268 Thaworn WIRATCHANT (THA) 69-66-65-68, Mardan MAMAT (SIN) 63-70-66-69.
269 Thammanoon SRIROJ (THA) 70-66-68-65, Udorn DUANGDECHA (THA) 65-68-69-67.
272 Boonchu RUANGKIT (THA) 67-67-71-67, Thongchai JAIDEE (THA)
67-69-69-67, Prom MEESAWAT (THA) 65-69-70-68, Kiradech APHIBARNRAT (THA)
67-68-68-69, Piya SWANGARUNPORN (THA) 70-65-67-70.
274 Quincy QUEK (SIN) 69-66-71-68, Simon GRIFFITHS (ENG) 69-70-67-68,
Chris RODGERS (ENG) 64-69-72-69, CHIANG Chen-chih (TPE) 70-64-71-69,
Pawin INGKHAPRADIT (THA) 71-68-66-69, Javi COLOMO (ESP) 65-72-65-72.
Selected scores
276 LIN Wen-tang (TPE) 66-68-69-73
278 LAM Chih Bing (SIN) 69-69-71-69
282 James Byrne (Scotland) 70 69 73 70 (T46)
290 Ross Bain (Scotland) 70 70 75 75 (T67)
282 James Byrne (Scotland) 70 69 73 70 (T46)
290 Ross Bain (Scotland) 70 70 75 75 (T67)
Labels: ASIAN TOUR
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