Ian Poulter won a play-off with Sergio Garcia on Sunday to guarantee his season is
remembered for more than funny trousers and a Ryder Cup cap.
For the second time in three years two cup team-mates tied for the
season-ending Volvo Masters at Valderrama.
In 2002 it was Colin Montgomerie and Bernhard Langer and they ended up sharing
the title when the light ran out after four extra holes.
But on this occasion the 28-year-old from Milton Keynes won the £432,202 top
prize with a par four as soon as they went into sudden death after finishing on
the seven-under-par mark of 277.
Garcia's drive finished to the right of the 18th fairway and left him needing
to slice the ball. Unlike his famous shot from the base of a tree at the 1999 US
PGA championship, however, he failed to do it and then, from the left-hand
rough, duffed his pitch and was still not on the green.
The Spanish star and pre-tournament favourite, who won two play-offs in
America this year, saved a bogey, but Poulter was just off the putting surface
in two and chipped to within two feet of the flag.
There was a £144,000 difference between winning and losing the shoot-out, so
no wonder Poulter was all smiles as two-year-old daughter Aimee-Leigh came
running into his arms.
Although he became world famous with his Union Jack trousers at the Open in
July and then an equally outrageous 'Stars and Stripes' version at the US PGA,
Poulter had awarded himself only one out of 10 for his season's work earlier in
the tournament.
But after winning his sixth tour title, but first of 2004, he commented:
"What a lovely end - a dream end. It turned out to be a great year."
While Garcia, who had missed a birdie putt on the final hole, would have
become Europe's leading player in the world again with victory Poulter now moves
back into the game's top 50.
"It's vital really," he stated, fully aware that it guarantees invitations
to the majors and world championships next year.
Third was Scot Alastair Forsyth, who was three in front overnight, but did not
have a birdie in his closing 74 and could not recover from bogeying the 16th
when the three of them were locked together.
Forsyth's overnight lead disappeared in two holes. He failed to get up and
down from short of the green both times, whereas Poulter sank a five-foot birdie
putt on the second.
However, Poulter was soon in trouble himself. At the long fourth he had to
play his second shot left-handed beside a tree and then he missed a four-footer
to bogey the fifth as well.
Things turned his way again, though, with successive birdie putts of nine, 15
and 30 feet from the eighth and he would have gone two ahead but for
three-putting for the long 11th for par.
Garcia had a chance to go joint leader on the sixth, only to three-putt from
six feet, but he was back to only one behind when he birdied the 11th and 12th
and Poulter's bogey at the 13th brought about a three-way tie.
That became two when Forsyth drove into the trees at the 16th, tried to find a
way through them to the green, but instead needed three more shots to make it
and bogeyed.
Surprisingly, the long 17th did not settle things, all three parring - but
only after Garcia had a lucky rebound out of the trees after carving his drive
and Poulter having to play his third shot over the pond at knee-level after
pushing his second into the crowd.
Once Garcia had missed his four-footer on the last and tapped in for par
Forsyth had to birdie, but found sand by the green and left his recovery short.
Poulter's approach finished 20 feet away and he had it to win, but misread it
and the ball went well wide.
Nobody on the final day ran up the 11 suffered by Darren Clarke at the 17th on
Friday - but New Zealander Michael Campbell and France's Jean-Francois Remesy
came close. They had 10s, Campbell in a round of 82 and Remesy in an 83.
Montgomerie was four under for the day coming to the hole, but although he
avoided the water he went over the green like Poulter and took six. He finished
with two bogeys for a 69 and three-over aggregate.
Garcia said: "It was heart-breaking, but what can you do? There can only be
one winner - usually!
"I tried to hit a three-iron for my second (in the play-off), but there was a
bit too much grass to make it cut as much as I had to.
"I did not see, but they were saying a little girl then picked it up and
dropped it. No big deal. I gave myself chances to win, but the one on the last
was not the best of putts."
Forsyth commented: "Obviously I'm disappointed, but I hung in and was there
the whole day. It just didn't happen for me. The one bad shot was off the 16th
tee."
Collated final totals in the Volvo Masters, Valderrama, Spain (Gbr and Irl unless stated, par 71):
277 Ian Poulter 71 67 69 70, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 67 69 71 70 (Poulter won at
first play-off hole. Poulter wins £432,202, Garcia £288,130)
278 Alastair Forsyth 68 69 67 74 (£162,335)
280 Peter Hanson (Swe) 70 70 70 70 (£129,660)
281 David Howell 73 69 73 66, Christian Cevaer (Fra) 69 70 70 72 (£100,357
each)
283 Lee Westwood 72 71 72 68, Scott Drummond 74 71 68 70
284 Paul Casey 72 70 74 68, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 70 73 68 73
285 Thomas Bjorn (Den) 75 70 71 69, Paul Broadhurst 73 74 69 69, Jonathan
Lomas 69 72 74 70, Darren Clarke 73 72 68 72
286 Richard Green (Aus) 73 73 73 67, Patrik Sjoland (Swe) 73 70 73 70, Graeme
McDowell 73 72 71 70, Stephen Dodd 71 72 69 74
287 Luke Donald 69 76 74 68, Colin Montgomerie 75 74 69 69, Angel Cabrera
(Arg) 73 66 75 73, Terry Price (Aus) 71 71 72 73, Padraig Harrington 72 70 71
74
288 Marcus Fraser (Aus) 70 75 71 72
289 Joakim Haeggman (Swe) 71 73 77 68, Nick O'Hern (Aus) 74 77 70 68, Phillip
Price 76 71 72 70, Marcel Siem (Ger) 76 74 68 71, Soren Kjeldsen (Den) 73 71 71
74
290 Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 73 76 69 72, Peter O'Malley (Aus) 69 72 75 74,
Brian Davis 68 73 75 74
291 Thongchai Jaidee (Tha) 72 71 73 75
292 Eduardo Romero (Arg) 75 79 69 69, Bradley Dredge 70 73 77 72, Barry Lane
73 73 74 72, Jose Manuel Lara (Spa) 67 79 72 74
293 Anders Hansen (Den) 78 69 73 73, Martin Maritz (Rsa) 76 71 73 73, David
Lynn 74 71 74 74
294 Paul McGinley 76 72 71 75
295 Brett Rumford (Aus) 74 75 76 70, David Park 73 71 74 77
296 Stephen Gallacher 77 74 71 74, Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 76 73 71 76, James
Kingston (Rsa) 71 72 75 78, Ricardo Gonzalez (Arg) 71 72 74 79
299 Thomas Levet (Fra) 75 77 78 69, Carlos Rodiles (Spa) 78 77 74 70
300 Simon Khan 76 75 75 74
303 Miles Tunnicliff 75 76 81 71, Jean-Francois Remesy (Fra) 74 73 73 83
304 Henrik Stenson (Swe) 75 75 76 78
306 Michael Campbell (Nzl) 74 76 74 82