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Smith storms past Mcilroy to hoist Claret Jug

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The 150th playing of The Open Championsh­ip called for a final round worthy of the annals of history, and Cameron Smith rose to the occasion by writing his own chapter at the Old Course.

Smith used a run of five consecutiv­e birdies to card an 8-under-par 64, overtake Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy and win The Open by one stroke for his first major title Sunday at St. Andrews in Scotland.

The Australian posted a four-round score of 20-under 268, tying the major championsh­ip record for lowest score relative to par. Cameron Young, his playing partner, eagled the 18th hole to place second with a 65, while Mcilroy finished two shots back.

Smith, who began the day four shots off the pace, won The Players Championsh­ip in March and had a close call at the Masters, where he stumbled in the final round and tied for third.

“I want to thank the team, all the hard work we’ve done,” said Smith, 28, as he accepted the Claret Jug. “The last couple years have really started to pay off, and this one definitely makes it worth it.”

Mcilroy’s bogey-free 70 was only enough for third place at 18 under. He notched top10 finishes at all four majors this year, but couldn’t cure his major title drought that dates to 2014.

“At the end of the day, it’s not life or death,” Mcilroy said. “I’ll have other chances to win the Open Championsh­ip and other chances to win majors. It’s one that I feel like I let slip away, but there will be other opportunit­ies.”

Smith made two birdies on the front nine before rattling off five straight at Nos. 10-14 to pass Mcilroy and touch 19 under. He rolled in putts of 16, 11 and 18 feet at the 11th through 13th holes to tie Mcilroy, then got up and down for birdie at the par-5 14th to grab the solo lead.

“I really wanted to stay patient on that back nine,”

Smith said. “I think I was maybe three back at the turn. I knew I just had to be patient. I felt good all day, and those putts just started going in on that back nine and just got a lot of momentum going.”

Smith’s strength became Mcilroy’s weakness on Sunday. The crowd favorite hit every green in regulation but two-putted all 18 holes, leaving several birdie opportunit­ies behind him.

“I felt like I didn’t do much wrong today, but I didn’t do much right either,” Mcilroy said. “It’s just one of those days where I played a really controlled round of golf. I did what I felt like I needed to just apart from capitalizi­ng on the easier holes ... If I had made the birdies there from good positions, it probably would have been a different story.”

Smith preserved his onestroke lead with a par save at the par-4 17th, the “Road Hole.” His second shot missed short, and he had to putt around a pot bunker up onto the green to set up a 10-foot par putt.

Young, the PGA Tour rookie making his Open debut, drove the 18th green and drained a 17-foot eagle putt to increase the pressure on Smith. The Australian got up and down for a short birdie, and Mcilroy couldn’t pull out a must-have eagle at No. 18.

“I feel like I can breathe,” Smith said. “These last four or five holes aren’t easy around here, especially with the wind up off the left . ... Yeah, just really proud of how I kind of knuckled down today and managed to get it done.”

Smith also fired a 64 Friday to take the 36-hole lead, but a 73 on Saturday sent him tumbling four shots behind Mcilroy and Norway’s Viktor Hovland.

Hovland went toe to toe with Mcilroy Saturday, when they both shot rounds of 66 and took a four-shot co-lead. But on Sunday, Hovland didn’t make a birdie until No. 12 and posted a 2-over 74. He tied for fourth at 14 under with England’s Tommy Fleetwood (67).

 ?? USA Today Sports - Michael Madrid ?? Cameron Smith kisses the Claret Jug after winning the 150th British Open on Sunday at the St. Andrews Old Course.
USA Today Sports - Michael Madrid Cameron Smith kisses the Claret Jug after winning the 150th British Open on Sunday at the St. Andrews Old Course.

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