Imperious Schauffele wins British
Open with faultless 65
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[July 22, 2024]
TROON, Scotland (Reuters) -American Xander Schauffele emerged
from a tightly-bunched leaderboard to win the 152nd British Open
with a supreme blemish-free final-round 65 at Royal Troon on Sunday.
Beginning the day among a group of players one stroke behind leader
Billy Horschel, unflappable world number three Schauffele was in
total control as he produced an immaculate display to finish on
nine-under 275.
When Schauffele tapped in for par on the 18th green the Claret Jug
was his, even if South Africa's Thriston Lawrence, who had earlier
led the tournament, was still to finish his round.
Justin Rose, bidding to become the first Englishman to win the Open
since Nick Faldo in 1992, was left to ponder what might have been as
he finished two shots back in tied second place having barely put a
foot wrong over the weekend.
American Horschel birdied the 18th to join Rose on seven under and
Lawrence was fourth on six under with another American Russell
Henley fifth on five under and Ireland's 2019 Open champion Shane
Lowry sixth on four under.
The 30-year-old Schauffele had not won a major until dominating this
year's PGA Championship in May when he finished on a record
21-under-par to edge out Bryson DeChambeau.
He took his new-found swagger to the Ayrshire coast, however, to
claim the Open in commanding fashion.
Precision golf meant he hit 16 of 18 greens in regulation and he hit
nine of 14 fairways.
"Hearing your name called with 'Open champion' after it is something
I've dreamt of for a very long time," Schauffele said after being
presented with the Claret Jug.
Schauffele's victory means the last seven majors have all been won
by Americans and for the first time since 1982 Americans have swept
all four majors in a season.
After the wild weather on Saturday had left 24 players within six
shots of the lead, the year's final major looked set for a
nerve-jangling climax.
Midway through the afternoon that seemed likely, but Schauffele was
simply too accurate off the tee, on the fairways and the greens,
making six birdies and not a single bogey in a masterful exhibition
of links golf.
BRITISH WINNER
When a dialled-in Rose birdied the second and fourth to move to the
top of the leaderboard hopes of a British winner were soaring.
Schauffele, however, made his move with consecutive birdies at the
sixth and seventh to share the lead.
[to top of second column] |
Golf - The 152nd Open Championship - Royal Troon Golf Club, Troon,
Scotland, Britain - July 21, 2024 Xander Schauffele of the U.S. hits
his tee shot on the 17th hole during the final round REUTERS/Andrew
Couldridge
Lawrence briefly led on seven under after an
exquisite approach and birdie on the ninth while Rose bogeyed the
12th -- only his fifth dropped shot of the entire championship.
Schauffele continued to turn the screw, becoming
the only player all day to birdie the treacherous 11th and sinking
another at the par-four 13th where Rose missed his birdie putt. The
relentless Schauffele also birdied the 14th to give himself
breathing space.
Former U.S. Open champion Rose, who had to qualify this year, had a
sniff of an eagle at the 16th but could only make a birdie, as did
Schauffele.
"I can't wait to drink out of it," Schauffele said of getting his
hands on the famous silverware.
"My dad's here so I'll let him do the honours of choosing."
Twenty six years after making his name by winning the amateur's
Silver Medal with a fourth-placed finish at Royal Birkdale as a
17-year-old, Rose came so close to glory.
"I saw glimpses of my name at the top of the leaderboard at times,
did some of the hard work on the back nine but Xander got that
momentum," the 43-year-old Rose said.
"He's an ice cold competitor and one of the best players in the
world and it was tough to keep up."
World number one Scottie Scheffler had to be content with a tie for
seventh after a costly double-bogey at the ninth stymied his
progress. The American double-bogeyed the 18th after scuffing his
tee shot little more than 100 yards.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Ed Osmond and Christian
Radnedge)
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