Otago Daily Times

Littleknow­n Ancer triumphs at Australian Open by five shots

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SYDNEY: Unheralded Mexican Abraham Ancer ignited his round with a remarkable chipin before winning the Australian Open by five strokes yesterday to join a host of golfing greats in lifting the Stonehaven Cup.

The world No 96, whose only previous win as a profession­al came on the Web.com tour in 2015, started the day with a fiveshot cushion, and a finalround threeunder­par 69 proved more than enough for victory at a 16under 272.

Australian­s Dimitrios Papadatos and Jake McLeod made things interestin­g for the galleries at The Lakes Golf Club with a glut of birdies, but Ancer’s overnight lead always looked like being too large a deficit to overcome.

Papadatos (67) finished second on 11under, with McLeod (66) in third a shot further back, with both earning the right to play with Ancer at next year’s British Open in Northern Ireland.

Local Marcus Fraser finished with a 70 for fourth on nineunder with a group of five players sharing fifth, including Japanese amateur Keita Nakajima, who started the day in second place and rounded out an impressive week with a 72.

American drawcards Keegan Bradley and Matt Kuchar both shot final round 75s to finish well off the pace in a share of 17th and 23rd respective­ly.

Ancer mostly had his game face on, but even he could not resist a huge grin when he chipped in at the fourth.

The 27yearold sent the ball well wide of the flag on to a bank at the back of the green and watched it spin at an extraordin­ary angle back into the hole for a birdie that extended his lead to seven shots.

The Midas touch continued with two more birdies at the eighth and ninth, but a bogey at the parfour 12th brought the chasing pack to within four shots.

Ancer flirted with the water with his approach shot at the 14th, but the ball stuck in the rough as it rolled back towards the lake and he was able to snaffle another birdie.

Born in Texas but raised over the border in Mexico, Ancer joins a glittering honour roll at the Australian Open, with Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Greg Norman among the former winners.

His margin of victory was the largest since Jordan Spieth triumphed by six shots in 2014, a win the American said acted as a springboar­d to his annus mirabilis when he won two majors the following year. — Reuters

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