Delight for McDowell as he joins list of ‘legends’

Graeme McDowell expressed his delight at becoming the first Irish winner of the Volvo World Match Play Championship as he joined an illustrious list of champions with a hard-fought victory over Thongchai Jaidee in Bulgaria.
Graeme McDowellGraeme McDowell
Graeme McDowell

McDowell, runner-up last year to Ryder Cup team-mate Nicolas Colsaerts, only took the lead for the first time in the final on the 14th hole after several vital par saves on the front nine at Thracian Cliffs.

But the top seed then birdied the 15th to move two ahead and sealed a 2&1 win on the 17th – his 99th hole of the week – to claim the first prize of £675,000 and a first European Tour title since 2010 to go with his win at the RBC Heritage on the PGA Tour last month.

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Arnold Palmer won the first World Match Play event in 1964 and the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Seve Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, Greg Norman and Ernie Els all have their name on the trophy.

“It’s very special,” said McDowell, who moved to the top of the Race to Dubai and should climb from eighth to seventh in the world rankings.

“We have been talking all week about how prestigious this event is. I can’t say how excited I am to win it and add my name to that list of legends.

“It was not quite the salubrious golf of this morning (when he was eight under in beating Branden Grace 3&2 in the semi-final). It was a little more tentative, there was a lot on the line.

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“I played strongly coming in and I sensed Thongchai was a little fatigued. I really tried to feed off that and show him I was really up for it. He made his first mistake on the 14th and the 15th has been kind to me all week.”

American Peter Uihlein shot four birdies on the back nine to win the Madeira Islands Open.

Uihlein carded a final-round four-under-par 68 to finish on 15 under for the tournament and see off the challenge of Denmark’s Morten Orum Madsen and Chile’s Mark Tullo, the overnight leader.

Scotland’s Craig Lee finished in fourth place, three shots off the pace, after closing with a 71.

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Birdies at the first two holes gave him the ideal start to the final day, but a double bogey and a bogey on the back nine, to go with two birdies, slowed his progress.

Wales’s Rhys Davies, and English pair Seve Benson and Richard Bland finished along with Finn Roope Kakko in a four-way tie for fifth on nine under par.

Harrogate’s John Parry finished nine off the lead after an excellent final round of 65. Malton’s Simon Dyson was three shots behind.