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Sharma holds nerve to claim maiden tour win at Joburg Open

Sharma holds nerve to claim maiden tour win at Joburg Open

December 11, 2017 | 10:25 PM
Shubhankar Sharma was unaffected by the rain delay in Johannesburg as he claimed his first European Tour crown.
Indian Shubhankar Sharma completed his maiden European Tour triumphyesterday in Johannesburg by winning the Joburg Open tournament healmost did not compete in. He carded a three-under-par last-round 69 to finish three strokes clearof South African Eric van Rooyen in an event that stretched to five daysbecause of bad weather.The final round was suspended Sunday due to torrential rain, lightningand hail and resumed yesterday at 0730 local time (0530 GMT). Sharma birdied three holes on the outward trek, then parred all theinward-nine holes with immaculate approach shots and putting highlightsof his game.After three bogeys during his opening-round 69 last Thursday, Sharmaplayed 55 holes without dropping a shot and his second-round 61 was thelowest score of the tournament.Visa delays and tiredness after a long Asian Tour campaign left the21-year-old Indian contemplating missing the tri-sanctioned EuropeanTour, Asian Tour and South African Sunshine Tour event.His late decision to visit South Africa for the first time paid richdividends as he pocketed a 2.6 million rand ($190,000/160,000 euro)first prize.Victory also guaranteed Sharma, along with Van Rooyen and joint thirdShaun Norris of South Africa, places at the 2018 British Open inCarnoustie next July.“I am thrilled that I came to the Joburg Open,” said Sharma after adding to five victories on the Indian circuit.“It has been a very long Asian Tour season for me so I was consideringwhether I wanted to visit South Africa. I am really happy that I did.”The previous best European Tour finish for the golfer ranked 462 in theworld was sharing ninth place at the Maybank Championship in KualaLumpur last February.“Winning the Joburg Open on my first trip to South Africa is a wonderfulfeeling,” Sharma said after receiving the trophy from Johannesburgmayor and golfer Herman Mashaba.“I met my caddie for the first time last Monday and we worked so welltogether. Heeding his advice was a key factor in my success.“Saving par on a number of holes thanks to up and downs played a significant role in keeping me at the top of the leaderboard.“It has been absolutely fantastic and the people were very welcoming. Ido not think I will ever forget this week. This is my first win on theAsian Tour and the European Tour so it means a lot to me,” said Sharma.“On the first day there were 240 players. I was just trying to play two good rounds to make the cut, which was really low.“I was playing well and had a great start on the second day which gotthings going for me. As soon as I reached 13 under after two days, Ithought I had a chance to win.“The only thing I was telling myself was to stay aggressive. I never wanted to be defensive.“Even when I was in front I never thought of defending my lead. I actually set a target of 25 under.”Van Rooyen quickly became the only final-round threat to Sharma and fiveoutward-nine birdies narrowed the gap to four shots by the turn. But he could add only one further birdie, leaving steady Sharma tosucceed one week after compatriot Arjun Atwal finished runner-up in theMauritius Open. Leading scores 264-Shubhankar Sharma (IND) 69-61-65-69267-Eric van Rooyen 64-67-70-66270-Shaun Norris 69-68-68-65, Tapio Pulkkanen (FIN) 65-64-73-68272-Marcus Armitage (ENG) 69-66-67-70274-James Morrison (ENG) 64-70-67-73, Joachim Hansen (DEN) 66-67-71-70275-Christofer Blomstrand (SWE) 70-68-62-75, Jinho Choi (KOR)69-66-70-70, Charlie Ford (ENG) 70-64-71-70, Daniel Greene 70-68-67-70,Paul Peterson (USA) 70-67-69-69
December 11, 2017 | 10:25 PM