24-year-old Open champion wins tournament by three shots and becomes first American to win the Race to Dubai crown DUBAI: Collin Morikawa produced a bogey-free final round to win the DP World Tour Championship, Dubai by three shots on a day in which he also made history by becoming the first American to clinch the Race to Dubai crown. In the European Tour’s season-ending Rolex Series event at Jumeirah Golf Estates, Morikawa, who started the day three shots behind overnight leader Rory McIlroy, saved his best for last, putting on a solid performance on the Earth Course to receive both the Harry Vardon Trophy and the DP World Tour Championship, Dubai trophy. “It’s a special win,” the 2021 Open champion said. “I told everyone that I wanted to win the Race to Dubai and the DP World Tour Championship. I had it in my control this week. If I had won, I would have sealed the deal and that is what I focused on. I couldn’t get my head too focused on the Race to Dubai as I knew there were many scenarios that could have happened, but I wanted to come out and win. “I felt my game was in a really good spot over the past a month and a half since the Ryder Cup, so overall it’s an amazing win and really special.” The 24-year-old carded six birdies, five of them coming in the last seven holes, en route to shooting a six-under 66. He ended the tournament on 17 under par, ahead of joint runners-up Matt Fitzpatrick, who made a late charge with six under for the day, and Sweden’s Alexander Bjork. McIlroy, who was bidding to win his third DP World Tour Championship title, saw his chances dented after a frustrating end, with three bogeys in his last four holes. The Northern Irishman finished with a 74 and tied for sixth place with Ian Poulter and Dean Burmester. By being crowned Europe’s No. 1, Morikawa was also awarded a bonus of $1 million, alongside his DP World Tour Championship winnings. Speaking on his key moments in the final round, Morikawa explained: “To be honest, I really don’t know. Starting off on six pars, especially with some birdie holes, wasn’t fun. I felt I was hitting some good shots and I wasn’t getting the breaks I needed or the putts weren’t dropping. I told myself when I looked at the leaderboard after nine that I’m still in this. I just needed one spark and, after parring 10 and 11, I knew something had to change. On the 12th, I got a great break and that is when the momentum started.” Morikawa’s victory concluded an exciting four days of action in a tournament that had a wide array of off-course entertainment and was attended by more than 65,000 spectators. Next year’s DP World Tour Championship, Dubai at Jumeirah Golf Estates — the season-ending event of the newly rebranded DP World Tour — will take place between Nov. 17 and 20.
مشاركة :