It was finally the day of the Jacquelin on the European tour on Sunday - after no
fewer than 27 top-10 finishes.
France's Raphael Jacquelin, competing in his 238th event, captured his first
title at the Madrid Open, beating Scotland's Paul Lawrie by three with a
closing-round 69.
The 31-year-old from Lyon was showered in champagne by fellow French players
after breaking his duck with a tournament record 23-under-par total of 261.
World number 18 Darren Clarke and Denmark's Anders Hansen shared third place
and Ryder Cup captain Ian Woosnam was fifth, while Colin Montgomerie stretched
his Order of Merit lead over Michael Campbell to £102,000 by finishing joint
eighth - but ended his week missing a 12-inch tap-in and tossing away his
putter.
Jacquelin took a seven-stroke lead, the biggest of the season, into the final
day after three sparkling rounds of 64.
Nobody has ever lost from such a position in the circuit's history, but there
looked a chance of it happening when Lawrie, eight behind at the start, went to
the turn in 31 and cut the gap to three.
Still fresh in the Aberdeen golfer's mind is the day at Carnoustie six years
ago when he cancelled out a 10-stroke deficit on Jean Van de Velde and won the
Open in a play-off, but it was not to be.
Although he added further birdies at the 12th and 15th for a joint
best-of-the-day 64 Lawrie never got any closer, Jacquelin's birdie putts of
eight feet on the 11th and 12 feet at the long 14th giving him a cushion over
the closing stretch.
"It feels fantastic,'' said the tour's newest champion.
"I've been waiting for
the first win for many years and it was tough today.
"When my lead was down to only three it was even more difficult, but I just
tried to hang in and give myself some chances for birdie."
Lawrie, runner-up for the second time this year, commented: "Raphael has
played so well that second place is like winning.
"I had a horrible end of 2003 and 2004 and to finish second twice is a huge
upturn.
"He obviously had to make a few mistakes for me to have a chance. For a while
I had it going and he was only level par and had not won before, but give him
his due. All credit to him."
Clarke's putting let him down badly. He missed four putts of seven feet or
less in the first 10 holes and also failed to make a 12-footer for eagle at the
fourth and 10-footer for birdie at the next.
A brilliant second shot to two feet did give him an eagle on the seventh and
when Jacquelin bogeyed the next it did not look all over for the Ulsterman.
But
a bogey of his own at the 12th left him too much ground to make up.
All Montgomerie said before leaving was: "The greens are terrible. That's one
of the reasons I putted terribly."
While a closing 66 looks decent enough on paper it contained three tiny misses
and he did not seem to care what happened to his putter after discarding it over
a railing on the way to signing his card.
In the event it was picked up and handed to caddie Alastair McLean, who put it
back in the bag. Whether it is still there for the Volvo Masters in two weeks'
time remains to be seen.
Only Campbell and Retief Goosen, now £224,000 behind, can deny him a record
eighth Order of Merit title - and first since 1999 - at Valderrama.
The New Zealander has to finish in the first five just to have a chance, while
Goosen must be first or second.
Collated final totals in the Madrid Open at Club de Campo, Madrid, Spain
(Gbr and Irl unless stated, par 71):
(x) denotes amateur
261 Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 64 64 64 69 (£114,727)
264 Paul Lawrie 68 66 66 64 (£76,487)
266 Anders Hansen (Den) 67 69 66 64, Darren Clarke 64 67 68 67 (£38,756 each)
267 Ian Woosnam 69 65 68 65 (£29,187)
268 Jose Manuel Lara (Spa) 67 69 68 64, Jose-Filipe Lima (Por) 66 66 67 69
269 Gregory Bourdy (Fra) 69 68 67 65, David Lynn 69 69 65 66, Colin
Montgomerie 72 66 65 66
270 Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 72 64 66 68
271 Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 67 69 70 65, Wade Ormsby (Aus) 70 70 65 66,
James Kingston (Rsa) 71 66 68 66, Andrew Marshall 70 68 65 68, David Park 68 67
67 69, Robert-Jan Derksen (Ned) 67 69 66 69, Stuart Little 67 66 68 70
272 Garry Houston 68 71 68 65, Mark Roe 63 72 69 68, Ricardo Gonzalez (Arg) 72
67 64 69, Alastair Forsyth 66 71 67 68
273 Brad Kennedy (Aus) 68 72 66 67, Fernando Roca (Spa) 69 68 70 66, Mark
Foster 69 69 68 67, Ignacio Garrido (Spa) 74 65 66 68, Oliver Wilson 69 68 70
66, Robert Karlsson (Swe) 63 76 65 69, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (Spa) 67 71 65
70
275 Christopher Hanell (Swe) 69 68 70 68, Gregory Havret (Fra) 69 68 70 68,
Francois Delamontagne (Fra) 67 69 72 67, Gary Emerson 67 64 73 71
276 Ian Garbutt 69 64 74 69, Stuart Manley 68 70 68 70, Damien McGrane 68 66
71 71, Carlos De Corral (Spa) 71 66 68 71, Johan Skold (Swe) 69 68 68 71, Simon
Wakefield 73 67 69 67, Steve Webster 72 68 69 67, Ivo Giner (Spa) 75 60 68 73,
Phillip Archer 70 67 66 73
277 Marcel Siem (Ger) 70 66 70 71
278 Stephen Gallacher 69 67 71 71, Francesco Molinari (Ita) 72 67 68 71,
Maarten Lafeber (Ned) 67 70 70 71, Martin Erlandsson (Swe) 67 69 69 73, Miguel
Angel Martin (Spa) 69 67 72 70, Markus Brier (Aut) 69 69 71 69, Brett Rumford
(Aus) 66 71 67 74, Scott Drummond 70 67 74 67
279 Graeme Storm 66 68 73 72, Gary Murphy 70 69 68 72, Anthony Wall 68 69 70
72, Fredrik Andersson Hed (Swe) 69 71 68 71, Philip Golding 74 65 70 70, David
Drysdale 72 67 70 70, Simon Khan 68 69 72 70, Richard Bland 73 66 71 69
280 Mattias Eliasson (Swe) 70 67 71 72, Alvaro Salto (Spa) 69 71 71 69,
Alessandro Tadini (Ita) 69 70 73 68
281 Santiago Luna (Spa) 69 69 68 75, Johan Axgren (Swe) 70 70 70 71, Emanuele
Canonica (Ita) 69 68 75 69
282 Neil Cheetham 70 67 70 75, Peter Hedblom (Swe) 68 70 70 74, David Carter
70 70 70 72, Christian Cevaer (Fra) 66 70 74 72, (x) Jorge Mazario (Spa) 69 71
72 70, Miles Tunnicliff 71 69 73 69
284 Soren Kjeldsen (Den) 72 68 70 74
285 Costantino Rocca (Ita) 71 69 74 71, Jose Manuel Carriles (Spa) 70 69 75
71
286 Rolf Muntz (Ned) 72 67 72 75