Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

I belong at this level: Shubhankar

- ■ Joy Chakravart­y sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ■ ■

Rory Mcilroy put memories of a flat final-round performanc­e at the Masters earlier this year firmly behind him with a battling last round at the British Open on Sunday as he posted a one-underpar 70 to finish six-under overall.

The 29-year-old’s bid to add a fifth major, four years on from his last, may have fallen just short but a return to the daring and carefree style of his younger days seems to have paid off.

Rather than going into his shell as he did in the final pairing with eventual champion Patrick Reed at Augusta this year, he didn’t let a frustratin­g front nine at Carnoustie -- including two bogeys in the first five holes -crush his spirit.

A look of astonishme­nt crossed his always expressive face when he dropped a shot at the fifth, and it was little wonder as the ball went round the lip but refused to drop.

Results: 276_Francesco Molineri (ITA) (70, 72, 65, 69); 278_Justin Rose (ENG) (72, 73, 64, 69); Rory Mcilroy (ENG) (69, 69, 70, 70); Kevin Kisner (USA) (66, 70, 68, 74); Xander Schauffle (USA) (71, 66, 67, 74); 279_Eddie Pepperell (ENG) (71, 70, 71, 67); Tiger Woods (USA) (71, 71, 66, 71); Kevin Chappell (USA) (70, 69, 67, 73). CARNOUSTIE: What started off as an extremely promising round for Shubhankar Sharma, finally turned out to be yet another learning experience in his young career. On the final day of the Open Championsh­ip in Carnoustie, the 22-year-old was on a tear, getting to two-under par after five holes and playing good golf in tough conditions. The wind had switched direction completely and was stronger than the first three days.

After birdies on the third and fifth holes, Sharma was approached by a rules official from the R&A and warned for slow play on the seventh hole. He then did not have a very good par-3 eighth hole, where he took slightly more time than usual because of three bad shots and was seen in a long conversati­on with the official.

That ruffled him slightly and holes nine and 10th, where he missed birdie chances from 12 and eight feet, completely took away the momentum from his game. He did hang on with a miraculous save on the par-4 17th, and later had a 10-footer for birdie on the 18th with two good shots, but missed that as well. He ended the round two-over with a total of four-over 288.

To Sharma’s credit, he refused to blame anything on the incident. When asked about it, he said: “Nothing really. It was just a small thing. We were playing a bit slow, so we just tried to catch up. It’s all part of the game,” he said.

“It was a tough finish for me, but I think I played well today. I started off really well. I was hitting it good, but kind of lost my concentrat­ion in the middle when I made those bogeys. But I am happy with the way I played. I had a birdie putt on the last, and I kept trying .

“I had this problem missing putts to the left yesterday, and we were trying to figure things out. I putted really well through the first eight holes, and then on ninth and 10th, the same thing kicked in and I just pulled both those putts. They were pretty easy, to be honest, and important for the round,” said Sharma who clearly has taken a lot of confidence from this performanc­e.

“I think that I belong to this stage. I haven’t played too much links golf before this, and this is only my third time, and it’s definitely very different compared to what we play normally, especially back home in Asia,” he said.

“So, it’s been a lot of learning. I feel like I’ve just grown as a player this week. Ithe only time I felt a bit of pressure was on the second day when I was outside the cutline and I really wanted to play the weekend. It was my birthday yesterday and I didn’t want to be sad on my birthday.”

Sharma takes a week off and will play the World Golf Championsh­ip-bridgeston­e Invitation­al.

 ?? AFP ?? Shubhankar Sharma in action at the British Open.
AFP Shubhankar Sharma in action at the British Open.

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