Stephen Dodd, who played 165 events before he won his first European Tour
title last November, did it again on Sunday night in the Nissan Irish Open at Carton
House.
The 38-year-old from Cardiff, 10 times at the qualifying school before he
broke through at the China Open, captured the £227,466 first prize when he
defeated Ryder Cup man David Howell - beaten in a play-off for the second week
running - with a birdie at the first extra hole.
It was a late, late show after a hailstorm drove the players from the course
in mid-afternoon and forced a suspension of play for 90 minutes.
That meant it was 8.20pm before the issue was decided.
Dodd and Howell had earlier both stood eight under par on the tee at the
513-yard last, but after Dodd had two-putted for birdie Howell came to the hole
and pushed his drive into thick rough.
There was no alternative but to lay up, but after hitting his third to 14 feet
he made the putt to keep his hopes alive of a first win since the 1999 Dubai
Desert Classic.
What followed was more disappointment just a week after he allowed the British
Masters to get away from him.
But for Dodd it was the continuation of a staggering upturn in a career which
for so long was a constant struggle.
Howell was in the rough again on the same hole, but this time with his second
shot, while Dodd was once more on the green in two. And this time Howell could
not get up and down.
"I don't really know how it's happened," said Dodd.
"I can't explain it, but after winning I developed more confidence and
believe in what I'm doing."
Aside from his Shanghai win it needed an eagle at the last from Ernie Els to
beat him in Dubai in March and his last four tournaments have seen him finish
sixth, fifth and 11th and now first.
Not having played a Major since he won the British amateur in 1989 and
qualified for the Open and Masters, he now has a chance to earn an exempt spot
at next month's US Open.
Dodd, who was planning a holiday in Dubai that week, needs to climb into
Europe's top two at the BMW Championship at Wentworth, but it remains a tall
order as Ernie Els and Retief Goosen are the ones he has to catch and they are
both playing.
"As time goes on you're not sure it's going to happen," Dodd had said on
achieving his first win.
"I never believed I wasn't good enough - if I didn't think that I would have
stopped a long time ago.
"There are lots of people who have been to the school four, five or six times
and proved themselves as winners."
Compatriot Ian Woosnam needed three visits before becoming world number one
and Masters champion.
A member of Europe's record-breaking Ryder Cup team last September, Howell
came into the week with an incredible 34 top-10 finishes since Dubai.
More than that, he was desperate to make instant amends for last Sunday when
he led the British Masters at the Forest of Arden by one with one to play, but
bogeyed it and lost a play-off to Thomas Bjorn with another bogey.
Howell admitted he was more gutted by that than any of his other near-misses,
but having risen to 37th in the world even without winning he refused to lose
faith in himself.
Third place was shared by Liverpool's Nick Dougherty and Argentinian Angel
Cabrera, while Padraig Harrington and Lee Westwood shared fifth with Australian
Nick O'Hern, who equalled the record on the Colin Montgomerie-designed lay-out
with his 66.
Dougherty, who had not even teed off when the storm hit and delayed play,
resumed two ahead and made that three with a superb opening drive and approach
to four feet.
But the script changed when he drove into sand on the 474-yard fifth and
four-putted from the fringe of the green for a double-bogey six.
Finding deep rough off the next tee he thrashed at the ball, but moved it only
a few feet and after bogeying there he hooked into more trouble at the long
eighth and dropped another shot.
Howell's birdies at the eighth and ninth lifted him one ahead, but as he
bogeyed the 11th Dodd birdied the 210-yard 12th and they changed places at the
top.
Dodd was two clear of Dougherty when he two-putted the long 15th, but Howell
hit a magnificent three-wood to three feet for eagle to be one back and then
level when Dodd bogeyed the short 17th.
Hopes of the first home win since John O'Leary in 1982 were suddenly revived
when Harrington sank a bunker shot for an eagle two on the 13th. But it still
left him three behind and he then ran up a six on the long 15th.
Meanwhile, Australian Brett Rumford, winner of the main event a year ago,
earned himself 10,000 air miles on a private jet by finishing top of a
competition based on how everybody played the final five holes during the week.
Collated final totals in the Nissan Irish Open at Carton House, Maynooth, Ireland(Gbr and Irl unless stated, par 72):
279 Stephen Dodd 69 70 72 68, David Howell 70 70 69 70 (Dodd won playoff at
first extra hole. Dodd won £227,466, Howell £151,644)
281 Angel Cabrera (Arg) 71 73 69 68, Nick Dougherty 68 72 67 74 (£76,839
each)
282 Nick O'Hern (Aus) 73 73 70 66, Lee Westwood 70 74 70 68, Padraig
Harrington 73 72 68 69 (£48,860 each)
283 Francois Delamontagne (Fra) 72 74 68 69 (£34,120)
284 Steven O'Hara 74 73 70 67, Richard Sterne (Rsa) 72 73 69 70, Philip
Golding 72 69 72 71, Oliver Wilson 72 71 66 75
285 Colm Moriarty 69 74 72 70, Simon Dyson 71 72 71 71, David Carter 74 73 67
71, Jose-Felipe Lima (Por) 71 71 69 74
286 Darren Clarke 70 75 69 72
287 Graeme Storm 71 75 73 68, Garry Houston 77 71 70 69, Bradley Dredge 72 68
75 72, Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 74 71 68 74
288 Maarten Lafeber (Ned) 72 73 75 68, Terry Price (Aus) 75 71 73 69, Charl
Schwartzel (Rsa) 74 72 73 69, Richard Finch 71 75 72 70, Joakim Haeggman (Swe)
73 70 73 72, Andrew McLardy (Rsa) 72 71 68 77
289 Joakim Backstrom (Swe) 74 74 73 68, Colin Montgomerie 71 73 75 70, Sandy
Lyle 73 72 73 71, Peter Hanson (Swe) 72 73 71 73, Carlos Rodiles (Spa) 73 73 70
73, Paul McGinley 72 69 74 74, Stuart Manley 72 74 69 74, Richard Green (Aus) 73
74 68 74, Christian Cevaer (Fra) 73 73 68 75, Pelle Edberg (Swe) 72 68 73 76,
Titch Moore (Rsa) 73 74 66 76
290 Scott Drummond 71 77 72 70, Peter Lawrie 74 71 74 71, Paul Broadhurst 72
75 72 71, Mark Foster 71 73 71 75
291 Peter Gustafsson (Swe) 72 73 74 72, Francesco Molinari (Ita) 74 72 73 72,
Peter O'Malley (Aus) 69 78 72 72, Jonathan Lomas 73 73 72 73, David Higgins 73
75 70 73, Henrik Stenson (Swe) 74 69 72 76
292 Brett Rumford (Aus) 73 73 75 71, Simon Wakefield 71 75 75 71, Miguel Angel
Jimenez (Spa) 71 72 77 72, Ian Woosnam 73 72 75 72, Robert-Jan Derksen (Ned) 72
73 73 74, Eduardo Romero (Arg) 72 74 72 74, Simon Khan 70 76 72 74
293 Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 74 74 74 71, Miguel Angel Martin (Spa) 72 76 73 72,
Soren Hansen (Den) 76 71 73 73, Ian Garbutt 72 74 73 74, Marc Cayeux (Zim) 71 73
74 75, Gordon Brand Jnr 72 73 72 76, Jean-Francois Remesy (Fra) 71 72 73 77
294 Johan Skold (Swe) 72 76 74 72, Gary Emerson 76 71 74 73, Rolf Muntz (Ned)
70 73 76 75, Gary Murphy 73 72 73 76, Klas Eriksson (Swe) 68 76 73 77, Jimmy
Bolger 73 73 71 77
295 Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 76 72 70 77
296 Robert Karlsson (Swe) 72 75 75 74
297 John Bickerton 73 73 73 78
298 Niki Zitny (Aut) 77 71 75 75