Gulf Today

Aussies Leishman and Smith win Zurich Classic in playoff

-

AVONDALE: Cameron Smith’s aggressive­ness on the TPC Louisiana’s water-lined 16th hole appeared to doom his team’s chances of winning the Zurich Classic when his 294-yard drive bounced off an embankment near the green and into the water.

Smith’s teammate, fellow Australian Marc Leishman, then flipped the script with a det chip.

Leishman made birdie ater a penalty drop in the rough, about 23 feet from the pin, pulling him and Smith into a tie with the South African duo of Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel that wasn’t broken until the Aussies won the first playoff hole Sunday.

“(Smith) hit a really good shot. It was the right club and the right shot, just drited a litle in the wind,” Leishman said. “I was just concentrat­ing on my game and I was lucky enough to be on the up slope.

“It wasn’t the hardest chip in the world, but under the conditions, well, I won’t say it was a must-make, but it was certainly very helpful that it went in.”

Smith and Leishman ended it with a par on their second trip up the par-5 18th ater Oosthuizen pushed his tee shot into the water and narrowly missed an 11-foot put for par.

“Disappoint­ed, but I felt we played well, gave ourselves loads of opportunit­ies,” said Oosthuizen, who was seeking his first win since the 2010 British Open. “We have a second. I feel next time we’ll come back and get the first. But so a disappoint­ing way to finish like that. ... It could have gone any way, the way we played in regulation.”

The Australian­s forced the playoff by shooting a 2-under 70 in alternate-shot play at the PGA Tour’s lone regular-season team event for a four-round 268. Oosthuizen and Schwartzel began the round with a one-stroke lead, but shot a 71 with three pars and two bogeys. It’s Smith’s third career victory and second at the Zurich, which he won with Jonas Blixt in 2017, the first year New Orleans’ PGA Tour stop switched from a traditiona­l individual format to an event featuring 80 two-man teams. That first victory also came in a playoff.

It was Smith’s best result since tying for second at the pandemic-delayed 2020 Masters last November. It’s also was his sixth top 10 since the current tour season started.

It was Leishman’s sixth career victory, his best result since tying for fith at the Masters this month and his first win since the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open.

The climactic finish capped off a compelling duel between two teams that teed off together in the final grouping and took turns holding leads that never grew to more than two strokes.

Smith made birdie puts of 9 feet on the par-5 seventh and 7 feet on the par-3 ninth to pull his team even atop the leaderboar­d. The Aussies went in front on 10, when Schwartzel’s approach landed in the bunker and his team two-puted for bogey.

Meanwhile, South Africa’s Garrick Higgo continued his brilliant start to life as a European Tour profession­al by sealing his second victory on the circuit at the Gran Canaria Open on Sunday.

The 21-year-old, who won last year’s Portugal Open on just his seventh European Tour start, eased to a three-shot triumph in the Canary Islands.

 ?? Agencies ?? ↑
Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman hold up the Zurich Classic trophy after winning the final round of the Zurich Classic.
Agencies ↑ Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman hold up the Zurich Classic trophy after winning the final round of the Zurich Classic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain