Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Buhai is buoyant after Open glory

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SOUTH Africa’s Ashleigh Buhai savoured a “lifechangi­ng” achievemen­t after defeating three-time major winner In Gee Chun in a play-off to win the AIG Women’s Open.

With the light fading fast at Muirfield, Buhai tapped in for par on the fourth extra hole at 9.10pm to seal a nerve-wracking victory, having twice surrendere­d seemingly commanding leads with a closing 75.

Five shots clear heading into the final round, Buhai was still three ahead with four holes to play, only to run up a triple-bogey seven on the 15th after finding sand off the tee and splashing out sideways into heavy rough.

That dropped the 33-year-old into a tie for the lead with Chun, the South Korean then completing a closing 70 in the group ahead to set the clubhouse target on 10 under.

After her birdie putt on the par-five 17th caught the edge of the hole and stayed out, Buhai had to hole from four feet on the last to force a playoff after charging her long birdie attempt past the hole. The players returned to the 18th for extra holes and Chun brilliantl­y saved par from a greenside bunker to keep her hopes alive, with Buhai two-putting from long range.

Both players missed the green on the second extra hole and hit poor third shots before Chun inexplicab­ly charged her par putt eight feet past the hole, but the 27-year-old recovered her composure to salvage a bogey after Buhai’s long par attempt came up short.

Despite the fading light and dropping temperatur­e, Chun and Buhai both hit superb shots into the green on the third extra hole, but neither was able to convert.

It was debatable whether a fifth extra hole would have been possible if required, but Buhai finally settled the outcome in style with a brilliant greenside bunker shot setting up a tap-in par which Chun – who had found sand off the tee – was unable to match.

“I am so proud of myself, how I dug deep to get into the play-off,” said Buhai, who joins compatriot­s Gary Player (1959) and Ernie Els (2002) in winning a major title at Muirfield.

“It’s so difficult to put into words right now. It might only hit me in a few days but I’m very proud.

“We’re a very small country so to be able to produce quite a few major champions it’s quite something, and now for me to be a female South African major winner I’ve got no words – it’s life-changing.”

Former champion Hinako Shibuno finished a shot outside the playoff after a final round of 71, with Ireland’s Leona Maguire two strokes further back in a tie for fourth alongside Madelene Sagstrom and Minjee Lee.

Maguire, who secured her best finish to date in a major thanks to an eagle and three birdies in a flawless closing 66, said: “(I’m) really pleased.

“I don’t think I could have played much better today. Had a few chances coming in, would have been nice to hole a couple more putts, but it was tough out there and definitely my best golf of the week so far.”

A closing 69 gave Scotland’s Louise Duncan a share of 19th place and her first cheque as a profession­al, 12 months after she was unable to claim prize money for finishing tied 10th as an amateur at Carnoustie.

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