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Play-off win earns O’hara £50k prize

Motherwell golfer Paul is on form

- Andy Mcgilvray

Motherwell’s Paul O’hara held off Wentworth-bound duo Graham Fox and Greig Hutcheon to win the £50,000 P&H Championsh­ip at the Renaissanc­e Club.

The 29-year-old followed back-toback 68s with a closing 74 in a testing wind on the East Lothian coast before beating Clydeway Golf colleague Fox at the first hole in a sudden-death play-off.

“This is probably my second biggest win after the one I recorded on the EPD Tour in Germany in 2011, with a 20-under-par total.”

Fox, a member of last year’s PGA Cup-winning side in California, had set the clubhouse target following a best-of-the-day 68 that included four birdies, but O’hara came to the last needing a par four for victory.

After being a long way from the hole in two, O’hara left his first putt 10 feet short, then saw the next one hang on the edge of the cup.

O’hara, who picked up a cheque for £5600 to add to the £1000 he’d secured as leading trainee after 36 holes, said: “I waited my 10 seconds in the hope it would drop, but it wasn’t to be.”

O’hara got the disappoint­ment out of his system in time for the title shoot-out.

Playing the first hole, the three-time Scottish Amateur Championsh­ip finalist almost holed his third shot from a greenside bunker before Fox missed with a 10foot par attempt to keep it going.

“I’ve played solid over the past few days,” said O’hara, who completed a clean sweep of events as he topped the Scottish Young Pros Order of Merit last year and is now off to a flying start in the Tartan Tour’s main points list this season.

He added: “I’ve had a real hot spell since I started working with David Orr.

“He has pretty much changed everything, including my thoughtpro­cess on the course, and that has helped me to win eight or nine events.”

Both Fox and Hutcheon, who finished three shots behind the leading duo in third, headed straight off to catch flights down to London for the opening round of the BMW PGA Championsh­ip at Wentworth.

It meant they were heading into the European Tour’s flagship tournament without a practice round at the Surrey venue, but supporting the first big Tartan Tour event of the season had been their first priority.

Decided over the opening two rounds, Irishman Brendan Mcgovern (69-70) picked up the £1000 prize for top senior, while Greenburn’s Iain Stoddart (69-74) earned the same prize as top club pro.

 ??  ?? Top prize Paul O’hara won the P&H Championsh­ip Picture: Brian Stewart
Top prize Paul O’hara won the P&H Championsh­ip Picture: Brian Stewart

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