A commanding three up lead after 12 holes on an afternoon of
light breezes at Dove Mountain, Australian Day was caught by the
Frenchman, who recorded clutch birdies at the 13th and 17th,
followed by an amazing par from a greenside bunker at the 18th.
Dubuisson then conjured two miraculous up-and-downs from desert
scrub at the 19th and 20th holes to keep the match alive before Day
sealed the win by sinking a four-footer for birdie at the 23rd, the
driveable par-four 15th.
The Frenchman, who had missed the green to the right off the tee,
hit a high lob wedge 20 feet past the cup and missed the birdie putt
coming back before the Australian made his to secure the title.
"I've never wanted something so bad in my life," an emotional Day,
26, told CBS Sports after clinching the winner's check for $1.53
million.
"Obviously I didn't want it to go this long but Victor, he has a lot
of guts and he has got a great short game. He got it straight out of
a cactus twice.
"The biggest thing was just how much do I want it, how much do I
want to win? I kept saying that to myself last night, kept
visualizing myself with the trophy. I am just glad that I could
finish it off, but it was a close one."
It was Day's second triumph on the PGA Tour, following the 2010
Byron Nelson Championship, and his first success in one of the elite
World Golf Championships (WGC) events which bring together the
game's leading players.
Dubuisson, who had never previously played matchplay golf until his
WGC debut this week, appeared to be on the way to a heavy defeat
after he recorded five bogeys in the first seven holes to reach the
turn three down.
However, the 23-year-old Frenchman raised his game on the back nine
and trimmed the deficit to two with a birdie at the par-five 13th
where he was just off the edge of the green in two shots.
Both players parred the short 16th before Dubuisson won the par-four
17th with a magical birdie to trail by just one.
STUNNING APPROACH
The Frenchman, who booked his place in the final with a one-up
victory over veteran South African Ernie Els earlier on Sunday, had
ended up in a fairway bunker off the 17th tee, but struck a stunning
approach to 12 feet above the hole.
Day, in the right rough off the tee, hit his second shot to 20 feet
and narrowly missed his birdie attempt before watching steely-eyed
as Dubuisson coolly sank his putt for a three.
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The Frenchman's late bid for the title looked decidedly shaky at the
par-four 18th when he pulled his approach well left into a greenside
bunker.
Day, who beat American Rickie Fowler 3&2 in his Sunday semi-final,
was on the back fringe of the two-tiered green in two, 70 feet above
the hole, from where he ran a very slick first putt 10 feet past the
cup.
Dubuisson conjured a miraculous shot from the sand for his ball to
end up five feet away and the Australian, with the title on the
line, left his par putt inches short of the cup.
Ice-cool, the Frenchman knocked in his par putt to level the match
and force extra holes.
ASTONISHING MOMENTS
Two astonishing moments were produced by Dubuisson before Day
finally clinched the title.
At the 19th, the par-four first, the Frenchman ended up in desert
scrub over the back right of the green with his approach.
Day then struck a wedge into the left greenside bunker before
Dubuisson, using soft hands, somehow hit his third shot from behind
a cactus, through sand, rocks and a television cable strung in front
of him, to four feet.
After the Australian had splashed out to six feet, he sank the par
putt before Dubuisson followed suit to remain all square.
One hole later, at the par-four ninth, the Frenchman missed the
green badly to the left with his approach, his ball ending up in a
bush from where he amazingly hit his third to seven feet, prompting
a wry smile from Day.
The Australian was on the back fringe in two from where he cozied
his approach putt to within two feet of the cup. Dubuisson,
non-plussed, duly sank his par putt to keep the match alive.
"I know he was the (world's) number one amateur back in 2009," said
Day about the gutsy Frenchman. "He has got a lot of game and you're
going to see a lot of him for years to come."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles;
editing by Larry
Fine)
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