Irish Independent

Dawson comes of age with Amateur triumph

- Brian Keogh

TRAMORE’S Robin Dawson was as relieved as he was overjoyed to end his five-year wait for a major win with a dramatic four-shot victory in the Flogas Irish Amateur Open at Royal County Down.

When all your peers and many of your friends have a major trophy on the mantelpiec­e, it’s hard to feel good about being Ireland’s highest ranked player.

But Dawson (22) came of age in Newcastle yesterday when he survived a back-nine war of attrition with the course rated the best in the world, closing with an adventurou­s, six-over 77 to win by four strokes from England’s John Gough and Castle’s Alex Gleeson on two-under 282.

“There were a lot of players with championsh­ips and I wasn’t one of them, which really bothered me,” he said.

“I feel very relieved knowing that all the stuff I have been working on has been the right stuff. This will give me a lot of belief.”

With a southerly wind, gusting to 30mph at times, Royal County Down jumped up and bit 22-year-old Dawson just when he looked to be cruising to what was still a hugely impressive, wire-to-wire victory.

Six ahead of England’s Alex Fitzpatric­k overnight, the big Waterford man bogeyed the third and birdied the short seventh to lead by five.

But as Fitzpatric­k double-bogeyed the eighth and tripled the ninth, eventually shooting 76 to tie for fourth, Dawson got his first warning that this would be no walk in a park when he also lost a ball off the ninth tee and made a double bogey to turn in two-over 37. Perhaps it was the fact he had extended his lead to seven shots that he was lulled into a false sense of security.

But while he insisted he never got ahead of himself, even when he birdied the 13th from 15 feet to go seven shots ahead of Gleeson on seven-under-par, Royal County Down still had her say.

After a bogey at the par-three 14th, he blocked his approach to the 468yard 15th into deep gorse, lost the ball and did well to convert a clutch nine-footer for a triple bogey seven after his fourth shot (his provisiona­l ball) had found a deep fairway bunker.

“I am good at gathering myself and getting going again,” he later admitted. “From there on it was ‘keep it in play’. That seven I took at the 15th really brought me back down to earth.”

A nervy bogey at the 17 th could have proved crucial but Gleeson did him a

favour by three-putting from 40 feet for a double bogey six, allowing the eventual champion to go the last with a four-shot lead.

While Gough posted a 70 that included an eagle two at the fifth to set the clubhouse target at two-over 286, Dawson rolled in a six-footer for an adventurou­s closing par five and a victory that brought tears to the eyes of his supporters.

“I’m speechless really,” the 6’3” Tramore man said after his first big win since he won the Irish Boys Amateur Open in a play-off in Lisburn five years ago.

“There have been a few sleepless nights the last couple of nights, and I am just relieved. That’s the word.

“I have just been knocking on the door for so long. I have so many top 10s in these championsh­ips, especially in match play. I have gotten to quarter-finals and semis and been beaten on the last.

“It was nice to do it over four rounds, especially at a venue like Royal County Down.”

But what him pleased him more than anything was getting a monkey off his back by claiming a big amateur win.

“It’s well overdue lads,” he said.

“Well overdue.”

 ?? PAT CASHMAN ?? Robin Dawson celebrates with the trophy after his Irish Amateur Open win at Royal County Down
PAT CASHMAN Robin Dawson celebrates with the trophy after his Irish Amateur Open win at Royal County Down

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