The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Italy’s Francesco Molinari got his hands on the BMW PGA Championsh­ip trophy yesterday as Rory McIlroy’s bid for a second title came up short.

Italian on cruise control while former world No 1 fails to mount charge

- Steve Scott at Wentworth stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Francesco Molinari always seemed destined to win one day at Wentworth, and the London-based Italian chose yesterday by holding a listless Rory McIlroy and the field at arm’s length to win the BMW PGA Championsh­ip.

The consistent, reliable 35-year-old didn’t have a top 10 for a year but a return to Wentworth – where he was second to Alex Noren last year – proved the perfect antidote to that. Starting the day level with McIlroy on 13-under after playing himself into position on a windy Saturday, it was the Italian rather than the former world No 1 who pulled effortless­ly away.

He completed a 68 for a four-round 17-under aggregate of 271, two ahead of McIlroy. The four-time major champion has the consolatio­n of moving into second place in the Race to Dubai, with Molinari motoring up into third.

For all that Molinari played exceptiona­lly well on a course he is supremely comfortabl­e on and McIlroy was positive about his improvemen­t afterwards, it’s still hard not to be concerned about the lack of spark from Europe’s acknowledg­ed leading player.

The majority of the 23,000 plus crowd had come early – times were moved up to avoid a predicted thunder threat in the late afternoon – to see a McIlroy charge, and it didn’t materialis­e.

The Italian wasn’t intimidate­d anyway by the presence of his former – and probably future – Ryder Cup team-mate.

“I’m old enough now that I’ve played in probably tougher circumstan­ces even than today; playing against Tiger in the Ryder Cup and stuff like that,” he said.

“Rory is a great guy. I didn’t feel intimidate­d at all. It’s just the last couple of holes, he’s basically thinking eagle, eagle while I’m thinking par, par, and that makes the whole difference.”

But he was pleased by his performanc­e over the whole weekend, not bogeying a single hole from the 10th in Friday’s second round onwards.

“To play, I don’t even know, 44 holes was it without a bogey here? It’s impressive, even for my high standards!” he joked.

“I don’t want to sound too arrogant but when I play like this, I think I do everything well. Chipping was good. Putting was good. I think I showed today that I can do pretty much everything as good as the top guys in the world.”

Molinari might have been relentless enough to beat anyone. However, until the very last blows he didn’t get a real challenge from behind once he assumed a share of the lead on Saturday.

Three birdies on the front nine while McIlroy flatlined establishe­d a lead that didn’t seem likely to be challenged.

Known for his addiction to tee-to-green golf, and a predilecti­on for the West Course despite never being a winner – five top 10s in his last six championsh­ips – the Italian purred along like a sponsor’s BMW rather than a flighty Italian Maserati.

There were a few probes from lower in the field, from defending champion Alex Noren, from Kiradech Aphibarnra­t’s early eagle, and then a late charge from first-round leader Luca Bjerregaar­d, who matched his Thursday 65 and no doubt bitterly regretted playing level-par golf in the two rounds in between.

After the regulation birdie at the par five 12th, Molinari had his three-shot lead, McIlroy was still becalmed and the trophy was assured if the Italian didn’t do anything daft, and that appears to not be in his DNA.

However, for the second day in a row he stumbled slightly on the final hole, making a mess from the perfect position in two, and faced a six-footer to save his par. Dramatical­ly, McIlroy was on the green in two blows 20 feet away, and it seemed an unlikely three-shot swing could snatch the title from Molinari yet again.

However, rather fittingly for a day when there seemed no spark from Rory, he left the eagle putt unforgivab­ly short – on line but in the jaws. It was resonant of his tentative play all weekend, in contrast to the free release of Friday’s 65.

Molinari, freed from any doubt, promptly holed the six footer to maintain his bogey-free streak and take the title, the near €1 million winner’s cheque as well the armfuls of Ryder Cup qualificat­ion points.

And he’s thinking about that for sure now.

“I was too far back, really, in the standings to be seriously thinking about it, but it’s on a course I love (he has three second places there) and where I have almost as good a record as I have on here, so I’d love to be there.

“I’ve put myself in a much better position. But right now, playing two tours and trying to play well, it’s enough on your mind without thinking Ryder Cup.”

For McIlroy, it was the same kind of flat feeling we’d seen at the Masters when he didn’t engage gear and really put any pressure on Patrick Reed.

This time Molinari was more proactive in building his lead but it was still surprising – and surely troubling for his devotees – to see nothing from McIlroy until it was all but over.

McIlroy admitted “disappoint­ment that I put myself in position and didn’t get the job done”.

“At least it’s better than the Players, there’s an improvemen­t,” he added. “I didn’t get off to a good start today and Francesco was three or four shots ahead of me by the ninth, and it’s hard to claw that back when he’s playing like that.”

He heads to Jack Nicklaus’ Memorial Tournament hoping to put himself in position and see if he can “get it done”.

“When you are working through a swing tweak it takes more than a week’s work to get it bedded in,” he said. “It’s not a bad week, but I wish had I given myself a nice cushion after 36 holes.

“There were still enough loose shots in there to know it is not quite there.”

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Getty.
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Alex Noren, top, and Luca Bjerregaar­d both threatened the leaderboar­d.
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