Schauffele British Open-bound after Greenbrier victory
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[July 10, 2017]
(Reuters) - Californian Xander
Schauffele, the son of a former German decathlete, showed plenty of
athleticism of his own to clinch a one-stroke victory at the
Greenbrier Classic in West Virginia on Saturday.
Schauffele fired a pitching wedge to three feet at the par-three
18th and sank the birdie putt to emerge triumphant after a four-way
battle at the Old White TPC in White Sulphur Springs.
He described the victory as life-changing after carding a closing 67
to finish at 14-under-par 266, edging fellow American Robert Streb
by one stroke.
Another American, Jamie Lovemark, and Colombian third round leader
Sebastian Munoz finished two behind.
All four players qualified for the British Open at Royal Birkdale in
two weeks.
Davis Love, 53, seeking to became the oldest winner on tour, faded
with a 75 after starting the day four strokes off the pace.
For much of the back nine on Sunday it looked like nobody wanted to
win, as the four contenders, with only one victory between them on
tour, stumbled one after another, before Schauffele came through
with two birdies in the final three holes for his maiden triumph.
Schauffele, 23, said his self-belief was boosted by a tie for fifth
at the U.S. Open three weeks ago.
“The U.S. Open was a huge moment in my career,” he told reporters.
“It kind of gave me the confidence and allowed me to play and win
this week.”
Not that he did not have his nervous moments on Sunday in what was
only his 23rd start on tour.
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Xander Schauffele on the 3rd tee during the final round of The
Greenbrier Classic golf tournament at The Old White TPC. Mandatory
Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports
“I felt very nervous kind of late in the round. I
tried to back to the basics, close my eyes and take some deep
breaths."
Schauffele comes from strong sporting stock. His father Stefan was a
promising decathlete whose international dreams were dashed when he
suffered a serious eye injury in a car crash.
Stefan subsequently moved to the United States and married a woman
from Taiwan, the couple settling in southern California.
Schauffele acknowledged the role of his father in his development.
“He kind of put me on some plan of his and I would say we're
trending,” he said.
“It's slowly sinking in. I had a couple minutes to myself in the
locker room, but it's just been an incredible feeling and it's
honestly just a dream come true.”
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Ken
Ferris/Peter Rutherford) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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