Padraig Harrington opened the new European Tour season with a dramatic last-hole victory at the Omega Hong Kong Open.
The Irishman needed to birdie his last two holes after South African Hennie
Otto had charged past him with a 65 and posted the clubhouse target at 10 under
par.
He almost blew it on the 16th, but saved par, regained his composure and
birdied the par-four 17th to set up a thrilling finale.
Taking to final tee tied with Otto, Harrington played a confident tee shot
down the middle, an approach over the water to 20 feet and then delighted the
galleries at the Hong Kong Golf Club to sink the winning putt and complete a
round of 66.
Harrington took the title by one stroke from the unfortunate Otto, who
finished three shots clear of defending champion Fredrik Jacobson, England's
Chris Gane, Darren Clarke and Thomas Bjorn who were all tied for third on
seven-under-par.
In November last year, Harrington flew to Taiwan for the opening tournament of
the 2003 season and left as champion of the BMW Asian Open.
This week he did the same, overcoming difficulties in his swing and
concentration to land the eighth title of his career and make the perfect start
to the 2004 season.
"I was happy with my game, I was expecting to do well and knew that a lot of
people would have to shoot well to keep up with me," he said.
"The first nine holes I focused really well, hit all the fairways, all the
greens and had 15 footers all the way - it was as easy a three under par as I've
ever shot.
"I didn't particularly like the tee shot on 10 and was just trying to stay
ahead of (overnight leader) Christopher Hanell over the next three holes and it
was only when I got to 16 I realised Hennie had overtaken me.
"My mindset changed totally, got very aggressive and really got back into
focus on those last three holes there. It was nice to turn it around like
that."
Harrington overshot the 16th and was faced with a tricky chip back from the
lip of the bunker, but got up and down in par and then birdied the last two
holes for the title.
"I couldn't have been left in a worse situation, except for the fact I had
seen the leaderboard at that stage and knew it was all or nothing at the time.
"That made it a lot easier because I knew I had to play it perfectly."
Harrington had not been feeling comfortable this week, first complaining of a
hook in his swing and then a lack of concentration as he attempted to compensate
for it.
As a result, Saturday's round was erratic but he admitted having luck on his
side, with the 67 down in no small part to an eagle on the 12th, courtesy of a
holed chip from the bunker, and a 20ft putt on the 17th to make up for three
dropped shots.
On Sunday, he made the most of that good fortune, surviving a lost ball on 10,
another bogey on 14, that difficult chip on 16 and Otto's late charge to become
the first Irishman to win the Hong Kong Open.
Collated scores and totals from the final round of the European Tour, Omega Hong Kong Open, Hong Kong GC
(Par 70)
269 Padraig Harrington (Irl) 67 69 67 66
270 Hennie Otto (Rsa) 68 68 69 65
273 Darren Clarke (NIrl) 68 69 69 67, Thomas Bjorn (Den) 69 71 65 68, Chris
Gane (Eng) 70 67 67 69, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 68 65 71 69
274 James Kingston (Rsa) 69 70 68 67, Christopher Hanell (Swe) 68 69 65 72,
Prayad Marksaeng (Tha) 67 69 67 71
275 Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 68 71 70 66, Michael Campbell (Nzl) 67 71 71 66,
David Carter (Eng) 70 71 65 69, Gary Rusnak (USA) 68 70 68 69, Rob Rashell (USA)
70 67 67 71
276 Steven Jeppesen (Swe) 68 73 69 66, Marc Pendaries (Fra) 70 71 68 67,
Henrik Nystrom (Swe) 69 66 73 68, Stephen Dodd (Wal) 69 72 68 67, Nick Faldo
(Eng) 69 72 67 68, Nobuhito Sato (Jpn) 68 72 68 68, Richard Mcevoy (Eng) 62 68
74 72
277 Kim Felton (Aus) 67 73 69 68, Wang Ter Chang (Tpe) 68 70 70 69, Anthony
Kang (USA) 71 70 67 69
278 Kyi Hla Han (Myn) 69 70 71 68, Derek Fung (Hkg) 68 71 69 70, Choi Kyung Ju
(Kor) 70 68 70 70, Barry Lane (Eng) 67 72 67 72
279 Shaun Webster (Eng) 68 70 75 66, Gary Emerson (Eng) 73 69 72 65, Edward
Loar (USA) 67 73 72 67, Danny Zarate (Phi) 71 70 70 68, Andrew Raitt (Eng) 73 68
70 68, Amandeep Johl (Ind) 66 71 72 70
280 Johan Skold (Swe) 70 71 73 66, Zhang Lian Wei (Chn) 67 72 72 69, Ian
Garbutt (Eng) 69 72 70 69, Peter Gustafsson (Swe) 72 64 73 71, Harmeet Kahlon
(Ind) 68 72 70 70, Daniel Gaunt (Aus) 69 73 66 72, Adam Fraser (Aus) 69 68 69
74
281 Andrew Pitts (USA) 74 67 71 69, Michael Jonzon (Swe) 75 67 69 70, Arjun
Singh (Ind) 69 71 70 71, Lu Wen Teh (Tpe) 71 70 68 72
282 Soren Hansen (Den) 74 68 67 73, Jamie Elson (Eng) 72 67 68 75
283 Pablo Del Olmo (Mex) 70 70 73 70, Paul Marantz (Aus) 71 71 70 71, Steven
O'Hara (Sco) 66 71 74 72, Tyrol Auret (Rsa) 71 68 71 73, Simon Dyson (Eng) 73 67
67 76
284 Joakim Haeggman (Swe) 72 70 74 68, Chris Williams (Rsa) 69 73 72 70, Peter
Hanson (Swe) 68 73 73 70, Robert Jacobson (USA) 71 71 72 70, Desvonde Botes
(Rsa) 67 71 74 72, Michael Kirk (Aus) 72 70 69 73, Mike Cunning (USA) 70 72 69
73
285 Chen Yuan Chi (Tpe) 70 71 73 71, Des Terblanche (Rsa) 70 68 74 73, Tsai
Chi Huang (Tpe) 68 70 75 72, Jamie Spence (Eng) 71 69 72 73, Louis Oosthuizen
(Rsa) 71 69 71 74, Tobias Dier (Ger) 72 69 70 74, Mads Vibe Hastrup (Den) 70 71
70 74, Rick Gibson (Can) 72 70 69 74
287 Simon Yates (Sco) 73 69 73 72, Sion Bebb (Wal) 74 68 72 73
288 Clay Devers (USA) 71 70 73 74, Sam Walker (Eng) 69 72 73 74
291 Tom Whitehouse (Eng) 69 72 75 75, M Sasidaran (Mas) 70 72 76 73
293 Boonchu Ruangkit (Tha) 70 72 77 74, Scott Strange (Aus) 72 68 73 80