The Citizen (Gauteng)

Lexi blows it on 18th, but what a consolatio­n

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– Thailand’s Ariya Jutanugarn closed with back-to-back birdies to win the season-ending LPGA Tour Championsh­ip on Sunday, while American Lexi Thompson (right) took the $1 million season bonus prize despite a last-hole heartbreak.

Ariya birdied four of the last six holes, sinking a 20-foot birdie putt on the 17th and a 23-footer at 18, to shoot a final-round five-under par 67 and finish 15-under overall at Tiburon Golf Club in Florida.

“My caddie told me to look at the leaderboar­d so I did and I was like, ‘Oh shoot I need to make this putt’,” Ariya said.

“I was so nervous my hands were shaking and I started crying

Miami

after I made it.”

Thompson and compatriot Jessica Korda shared second, just one stroke adrift, with Sweden’s Pernilla Lindberg and South Korean Ji Eun-Hee tied for fourth a shot further back.

It appeared Thompson would take the title, needing only a twofoot tap-in par putt at 18 to reach the clubhouse on what proved to be the winning score.

But the world No 4 missed, the ball lipping off the right edge, as she settled for the Race to the Globe season bonus prize.

Ariya, meanwhile, joined the leaders on the penultimat­e green, then topped her feat with only the fourth birdie of the day at the last for the title.

It was the 2016 British Open champion’s seventh career LPGA title and her second of the year after the Manulife Classic in June.

She plans to take the $500 000 winner’s cheque home and celebrate her 22nd birthday on Thursday.

hompson was the top finisher among the five players who could have ensured the $1 million by winning in Naples, the rich prize soothing the sting of defeat.

“It definitely eases it,” Thompson said. “It’s not the way I wanted to finish the event but there are a lot of positives to take from it.”

Thompson also captured the Vare Trophy for the LPGA’s lowest scoring average for the season.

Thompson picked up four birdies on the front nine, before adding two more at at 13 and 17 before her nightmare closing bogey.

Ariya opened with her lone bogey, then had birdies at four and six and birdied 13 and 14 before her finishing heroics.

The LPGA Player-of-the-Year award was shared for the first time, with South Koreans Park Sung-Hyun – also the LPGA Rookie-of-the-Year – and Ryu So-Yeon being named co-winners.

US Women’s Open champion Park matched Nancy Lopez as the only players to win top player and rookie awards in the same year. –

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