Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Emotional Lee Westwood ends European Tour title drought with victory at Sun City

An eagle and six birdies in a brilliant final round clinched victory

Phil Casey
Sunday 11 November 2018 21:37 GMT
Comments
(EPA)

An emotional Lee Westwood fought back tears after claiming his first European Tour title since 2014 with a third victory in the Nedbank Golf Challenge in South Africa.

Westwood fired an eagle and six birdies in a brilliant final round of 64 at Sun City to finish 15 under par and three shots ahead of overnight leader Sergio Garcia, with home favourite Louis Oosthuizen a shot further back after a double bogey on the 18th.

The victory is Westwood's 24th on the European Tour and his first on the circuit since April 2014, although he did also win the Indonesian Masters on the Asian Tour in 2015.

And it vindicated the 45-year-old's decision to rule himself out of the running to be Europe's Ryder Cup captain in 2020 as he targets a record-equalling 11th appearance in the contest as a player instead at Whistling Straits.


 Lee Westwood's win was his first on the European tour since 2014 
 (Getty)

"I'm a bit emotional to be honest, you're never sure whether you're going to be able to do it again," Westwood, who previously won the event in 2010 and 2011 when it was a 12-man invitational, told Sky Sports.

"Still got it, I guess. Just nice to do it again under pressure and win against a couple of quality players at the end there. I can't wait to watch the highlights to be honest because I hit so many good shots coming in."

Westwood's partner Helen Storey was his caddie for the week and he added: "It's been brilliant. She's caddied twice for me this year and we lost in a play-off in Denmark and we've won here. Might have to have a bit of a rethink, not least about who caddies for me, but our percentages!"

Westwood began the final round three shots behind Garcia, but made the ideal start with an eagle from three feet on the par-five second and also birdied the eighth to reach the turn in 33.


 Lee Westwood kept his cool on the greens 
 (Getty)

Further birdies on the 11th, 13th and 14th ensured he kept pace with Oosthuizen as the pair traded blows on the back nine before Oosthuizen crucially three-putted the 15th from the back of the green.

Westwood seized his opportunity with both hands and birdied the 16th and 17th to leave Oosthuizen needing to eagle the last to force a play-off, but a wayward drive led to a double-bogey six to drop the former Open champion into third place.

"There's not much more I could have done more," Oosthuizen said. "I made good putts. I missed a few easier putts, but all in all I attacked when I wanted to attack and I pulled a lot of good shots off.

"Hats off to Lee the way he played today. Eight under around that golf course without a dropped shot is good golf."

Garcia had been chasing back-to-back wins and a wire-to-wire success after an opening 64, but had to settle for second place after a closing 70.

"I didn't have my A game, other than Thursday obviously, but I fought hard," Garcia said. "I'm thrilled for Lee. He had a bad Ryder Cup at Hazeltine (in 2016) and he struggled a little bit, but he's been playing much better this year.

"He's been knocking on the door for winning. I wish I would have won myself, but if not, obviously to see Lee do it is pretty nice."

PA

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in