The Arizona Republic

Aussie duo wins Zurich in playoff

- Brett Martel

AVONDALE, La. – Cameron Smith’s aggressive­ness on the TPC Louisiana’s water-lined 16th hole appeared to doom his team’s chances of winning the Zurich Classic when his 294-yard drive bounced off an embankment near the green and into the water.

Smith’s teammate, fellow Australian Marc Leishman, then flipped the script with a deft chip.

Leishman made birdie after a penalty drop in the rough, about 23 feet from the pin, pulling him and Smith into a tie with the South African duo of Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel that wasn’t broken until the Aussies won the first playoff hole Sunday.

“(Smith) hit a really good shot. It was the right club and the right shot, just drifted a little in the wind,” Leishman said. “I was just concentrat­ing on my game and I was lucky enough to be on the up slope.

“It wasn’t the hardest chip in the world, but under the conditions, well, I won’t say it was a must-make, but it was certainly very helpful that it went in.”

Smith and Leishman ended it with a par on their second trip up the par-5 18th after Oosthuizen pushed his tee shot into the water and narrowly missed an 11-foot putt for par.

“Disappoint­ed, but I felt we played well, gave ourselves loads of opportunit­ies,” said Oosthuizen, who was seeking his first win since the 2010 British Open. “We have a second. I feel next time we’ll come back and get the first. But so a disappoint­ing way to finish like that. … It could have gone any way, the way we played in regulation.”

The Australian­s forced the playoff by shooting a 2-under 70 in alternate-shot play at the PGA Tour’s lone regular-season team event for a four-round 268. Oosthuizen and Schwartzel began the round with a one-stroke lead, but shot a 71 with three pars and two bogeys.

“It was really tough,” said Smith, whose previous victory came at the Sony Open in Hawaii in 2020. “That back nine was brutal, but we hung in there.”

It’s Smith’s third career victory and second at the Zurich, which he won with

Jonas Blixt in 2017, the first year New Orleans’ PGA Tour stop switched from a traditiona­l individual format to an event featuring 80 two-man teams. That first victory also came in a playoff.

“I guess I’m good at picking good partners,” Smith said. “We had such a good week on and off the golf course.”

It was Smith’s best result since tying for second at the pandemic-delayed 2020 Masters last November. It’s also was his sixth top 10 since the current tour season started.

It was Leishman’s sixth career victory, his best result since tying for fifth at the Masters this month and his first win since the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open.

Peter Uihlein and Richy Werenski shot a 67, with six birdies and one bogey, to shoot up the leaderboar­d from 18th to third.

Billy Horschel and former LSU player

Sam Burns shot a 69 to tie for fourth with Brandt Snedeker-Keith Mitchell and Brendan Steele-Kegan Bradley.

Ryan Palmer and Jon Rahm, the defending champions from 2019, closed with a 70 to finish seventh at 17 under.

Smith and Leishman each earned $1.07 million for the victory – a result that also forced Smith to address a promise he’d made to cut his mullet hair style when he won a tournament.

European Tour

LAS PALMAS, Spain – Making good use of advice from countryman Gary Player, South African Garrick Higgo won the Gran Canaria Open by three shots for his second European Tour victory.

The 21-year-old Higgo shot a 7-under 63 for the second consecutiv­e day to hold off a charge by Maximilian Kieffer,

who finished second after an 8-under 62 that included seven birdies and an eagle.

This time, Higgo had a special reason to listen to nine-time major champion Player.

“I spoke to Gary last night actually and he just said there is no such thing as a lead and you should play like you’re two behind,” Higgo said. “That was nice from him. He’s said it to me so many times but I’ve never really had a lead so I’ve never had to worry about that.”

The overnight leader by two shots, Higgo had five birdies and an eagle in his final round at the Meloneras Golf Course in the Canary Islands, ending the tournament at 25 under. His other European Tour win came last season at the Portugal Open.

“It’s unreal,” Higgo said. “I can’t put it into words, it feels amazing. It’s quite a relief finishing now.”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? Marc Leishman, left, and teammate Cameron Smith hold the trophy after winning the PGA Zurich Classic on Sunday at TPC Louisiana.
GERALD HERBERT/AP Marc Leishman, left, and teammate Cameron Smith hold the trophy after winning the PGA Zurich Classic on Sunday at TPC Louisiana.

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