Arab Times

golf

Jimenez wins Chubb Classic for 7th PGA Tour Champions title

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LOS ANGELES, Feb 18, (AP): A marathon finish was only part of the challenge facing J.B. Holmes. He also had to contend with a four-shot deficit against Justin Thomas on greens that were increasing­ly bumpy with so many footprints over nine hours, and wind that made Riviera tougher than ever.

With one good break, two big putts and plenty of help from Thomas on the back nine, Holmes won the Genesis Open on Sunday for his first PGA Tour title in nearly three years that earned him a trip back to the Masters.

So difficult was the final round of a 34-hole day that Holmes didn’t make a birdie over the last eight holes and closed with a 1-under 70.

“I knew it was going to be very difficult to shoot a low score,” Holmes said. “I needed some help from Justin.”

Thomas shot a 65 in the morning to complete the third round with a fourshot lead. Holmes says his caddie, Brandon Parsons, asked him at one point if he thought Thomas would get to 20-under par, a score only two other players have reached at Riviera.

Thomas played a big part in Holmes’ victory, however.

He took 19 putts in a wild back nine that featured three two-shot swings because of putting.

Thomas, who closed with a 75, three-putted from long range on the 10th as Holmes made birdie for his first lead of the week. Holmes returned the favor on the next hole when he turned birdie into a shocker of a bogey , three-putting from 3 feet. And then it was back to Thomas, and what turned out to be the decisive moment.

Holmes missed the 13th green to the right and chipped to 12 feet. Thomas was some 65 feet away and lagged his putt to 8 feet. Holmes made the par putt , and not only did Thomas miss his putt for par, he lipped out the next one for a double bogey.

That took Thomas from one ahead to one behind, and he never caught up.

Holmes delivered another dagger with a 12-foot par save on the 16th right before Thomas made birdie to avoid another two-shot swing, and Thomas couldn’t convert birdie chances from 6 feet and 20 feet on the last two holes.

Thomas said he struggled putting in the wind and it “showed a flaw in my game.” Holmes, who finished at 14-under 270, moved up from No. 100 to No. 42 in the world, making him eligible for the World Golf Championsh­ips in Mexico City next week. But it’s been a long stretch, and he decided not to play. As for that invitation to the Masters?

Tiger Woods shot 65 to finish his morning third round, though he was never in range of winning. Woods closed with a 72 in the afternoon, and tied for 15th.

He said he wouldn’t touch his clubs on Monday as he goes from cold air at sea level to Mexico City next week.

Maybe the biggest break for Holmes was at the par-4 seventh, when his wedge from a bunker didn’t clear the lip and buried into the grass framing the sand. He at first feared he couldn’t find it. Once he did, he was given relief from an embedded ball and escaped with a bogey.

Holmes and Thomas weren’t the only ones who struggled on greens. Adam Scott was right in the hunt until he missed six consecutiv­e putts from under 10 feet that dropped him out of contention quickly. Scott closed with a 76 and tied for seventh.

Si Woo Kim had a 66, the low score of the final round, and finished third. Rory McIlroy almost got back in the game when he holed a bunker shot on the 16th to get within two shots, but he failed to birdie the par-5 17th and was fooled by the wind in making bogey on the final hole for a 69. He tied for fourth with Marc Leishman (68).

No one had a tougher time than Jordan Spieth, whose final round included a birdie, par, bogey, double bogey, triple bogey and quadruple bogey, the latter on the 10th hole when he hit four shots out of bunkers. He shot 81, his second-highest score as a pro.

Meanwhile in Naples, Florida, Miguel Angel Jimenez won the Chubb Classic on Sunday for his seventh PGA Tour Champions title, beating Bernhard Langer and Olin Browne with a 5-foot par putt on the first hole of a playoff.

Jimenez closed with a 5-under 66 at The Classics at Lely Resort to match Langer and Browne at 13-under 200.

Jimenez has won in each of his six seasons on the 50-and-over tour. The 55-year-old Spaniard won the major Regions Tradition and Senior British Open last season.

Langer shot 68, and Browne had a double bogey on the par-4 18th in regulation for a 66.

The 61-year-old Langer, the Oasis Championsh­ip winner last week near his home in Boca Raton, won the event in 2011, 2013 and 2016.

Kevin Sutherland and Woody Austin each shot 69 to finish a shot out of the playoff.

Stephen Ames, tied for the secondroun­d lead with Ken Tanigawa and Glen Day, had a 71 to tie for sixth at 11 under with Tom Lehman (65), Sandy Lyle (68), Retief Goosen (69) and Colin Montgomeri­e (70).

Tanigawa and Day each shot 72 to finish at 10 under. Steve Stricker (70) also was at 10 under.

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 ??  ?? J.B. Holmes hits his second shot on the 13th hole during the final round. (Inset): Holmes holds up his trophy on the 18th green after winning the Genesis Open golf tournament at Riviera Country Club on Feb 17, in the PacificPal­isades area of Los Angeles. (AP)
J.B. Holmes hits his second shot on the 13th hole during the final round. (Inset): Holmes holds up his trophy on the 18th green after winning the Genesis Open golf tournament at Riviera Country Club on Feb 17, in the PacificPal­isades area of Los Angeles. (AP)
 ?? (AP) ?? Tiger Woods hits from the green side bunker and holes out for birdie on the 16th hole during the final round of the Genesis Open golf tournament at Riviera Country Club on Feb 17, in the Pacific Palisades area of LosAngeles.
(AP) Tiger Woods hits from the green side bunker and holes out for birdie on the 16th hole during the final round of the Genesis Open golf tournament at Riviera Country Club on Feb 17, in the Pacific Palisades area of LosAngeles.

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