The Citizen (Gauteng)

Finau plays through pain barrier for second

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– Tony Finau (right) could barely walk when he woke up on Thursday after dislocatin­g his ankle celebratin­g a hole-inone at the Masters Par 3 contest but there was no way the gutsy American was ever going to miss his Augusta National debut and carded a four-under 68 in the feelgood story of the first round.

Finau, who popped his ankle back into place seconds after it happened, only got the go-ahead to play less than five hours before he teed off and he made the most of it, finishing two strokes behind first-round leader Jordan Spieth.

“To be in this position I’m at

Augusta

now, when I woke up this morning, nothing short of a miracle if you ask me,” he said.

“I could barely put any pressure on it. I could barely walk.”

The 28-year-old suffered the injury during the Par-3 contest when he charged toward the green after an ace. Moments after Finau turned and started to backpedal down the fairway he rolled his left ankle and fell to the ground.

After a mostly sleepless night during which he was focused on icing his foot and keeping it elevated, Finau had an early-morning MRI and learned he had torn a couple of ligaments.

After taking medication to dull the pain and getting taped up to stabilise the injury, Finau decided to give it a go.

“I want to play this week,” said Finau. “Waiting for another opportunit­y to play my first Masters, or whenever that was, whether it was next year or another time, was going to be really hard to swallow.”

The world No 34 set off in the afternoon wave with limited movement in his left foot and got off to an inauspicio­us start with a bogey at the par-four opening hole.

But the long-hitter quickly steadied the ship with a birdie at the par-five second, which marked the start of a flawless 12-hole stretch that included five birdies.

His only other bogey came at the par-four 14th but he followed that immediatel­y with a birdie at the 15th to pick up a shot at all four of the par-five holes.

Finau, the first golfer of Tongan and American Samoan descent to play on the PGA Tour, turned profession­al in 2007 at 17, turning down college scholarshi­p offers to play basketball.

Finau earned his sole PGA Tour victory in 2016 at the Puerto Rico Open. – Reuters

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