Click here for Goosen factfile
Click here for Goosen's 2001 record
Click here for final Order Of Merit standings
Retief Goosen clinched the European Order of Merit title today - and then 35
minutes later added the Telefonica Madrid Open for good measure.
With the money list crown secure once Darren Clarke finished only tied sixth,
the 32-year-old South African could concentrate on trying for his third win of
the season.
But he had to go to the third hole of a sudden-death play-off with
Warwickshire's Steve Webster to achieve it, holing a 10-foot birdie putt after
Webster had missed from five on the first.
For the 25-year-old from Atherstone it was a third runners-up finish of his
tour career, but it was perhaps only fitting that Goosen should wrap things up
in the grandest possible manner.
He is the first non-European to finish top since Greg Norman in 1982 and he
did it with two tournaments still to come.
"This is my 10th season on tour and to be number one is unbelievable," he
said.
"It was nice to round it off this way and it's a great feeling.
"It's still got to sink in a bit, but it's been a dream year. The competition
is really tough and it's hard to think I am the best player in Europe this
year."
Now into the world's top 10 for the first time as well, US Open champion
Goosen admitted that he thought he was about to lose on the first play-off
hole.
Of the putt on the third, however, he added: "It was downhill and there was
no way I could leave that one short. All I had to do was pick the perfect line
and I did."
Goosen closed with a 68 and Webster a 66 as the pair had tied on the
20-under-par total of 264, Goosen bogeying the last just as he had when he won
the US and Scottish Opens - and when he lost the Lancome Trophy from four ahead
with four to play last month.
After Webster's short miss on the first, Goosen had the chance on the next -
again the 18th - but after coming out of a fairway bunker to 15 feet he left the
birdie attempt short.
Back they went to the short 17th this time and after Webster, from short of
the green, had chipped just past with a three-wood Goosen holed to take the
£145,904 cheque and so lift his earnings for the year to £1.75million.
Clarke, second on the Order of Merit to Colin Montgomerie in 1998 and to Lee
Westwood last year, said: "Retief has played consistently well all year.
"He won one of the most difficult majors to win and played superbly at Loch
Lomond to win there as well.
"Hopefully my time will come. I was playing really nicely until the St Louis
world championship was called off and the putter has let me down since. I've not
been able to convert my chances."
Prior to his US Open breakthrough in June, Goosen had never finished higher
than 10th in any major, but he had been seventh on the Order of Merit in 1997
and fifth in 1999 - and that after missing the start of the season with a broken
left arm suffered while skiing.
His pedigree was known long before that. He and Ernie Els were amateur rivals,
but Goosen's progress was halted in a frightening way when he was struck by
lightning while playing, an incident which left him with an irregular heartbeat
and some hearing problems.
He recovered, however, to be South African amateur champion in 1990, then
their Rookie of the Year in 1991. He won the European tour qualifying school the
following season and in his first event of the 1993 finished second in the Dubai
Desert Classic.
People expected more of him then than he was able to deliver, but two more
feathers in his cap came when he was unbeaten as South Africa won the Alfred
Dunhill Cup at St Andrews in 1997 and 1998.
"He's good enough and ready now to win a major," said teammate Els at the
time, but it did not come straightaway and eventually Goosen started working
with Belgian sports psychologist Jos Vanstiphout.
The sessions were to bring handsome rewards. When Goosen had two putts from 10
feet to become US Open champion and three-putted, missing from only two feet, he
might have cracked.
But, lucky to have an 18-hole play-off the next day rather than an instant
shoot-out with Mark Brooks, Goosen was able to spend time with Vanstiphout and
took the positives out of the situation rather than the negatives.
"I've beaten 154 of the 156 players, now there's only one left and I like
those odds much better," was the message.
He putted beautifully when they faced each other and so became only the
seventh non-American ever to win the title in its 101-year history.
And now, after winning the Scottish Open as well, he becomes only the fifth
non-European to be Europe's number one, following compatriots Bobby Locke (1946,
1950 and 1954) and Dale Hayes (1975) and Australians Norman von Nida (1947) and
Norman.
With two eight-lite bottles of champagne waiting at home - left-overs from his
wedding earlier this year - he was able to tell his wife Tracy to put them on
ice when he took a two-stroke lead with a round to play.
Webster initially caught him with three birdies in the first five holes, but
then handed back the initiative by three-putting the eighth.
Goosen doubled his advantage by chipping in from around 30 feet at the next
and pitched to three feet on the 10th.
Webster answered that with a 25-foot putt, however, and after Goosen
three-putted the 13th they were back level when Webster pitched to three feet
two holes later.
Goosen got his nose back in front by hitting his tee shot to four feet on the
short 17th, but then bunkered his approach to the 349-yard last and with the
ball below his feet came out far too strongly.
Londoner Brian Davis shot a career-best 62 to finish joint third with Diego
Borrego a stroke behind, the Spaniard being desperately unlucky on the last when
his second shot hit the flag and rebounded 25 feet away, from where he
two-putted.
Most disappointed of all had to be Ireland's David Higgins, who after leading
at halfway and joint second with a round to go had a closing 75 - the second
worst score of the day - and so still has some work to do to spare himself a
trip to the qualifying school next month.
Borrego is safe now, moving up from 140th to 98th and so is Indian Jeev Singh,
who improved from 122nd to 105th by finishing sixth.
Scores:
264 R Goosen (Rsa) 66 64 66 68, S Webster 68 62 68 66 (Goosen won at third
play-off hole. Goosen wins £145,904, Webster £97,267)
265 B Davis 66 64 73 62, D Borrego (Spa) 69 65 64 67 (£49,286 each)
267 M Brier (Aut) 67 68 66 66 (£37,118)
268 R Coles 66 69 69 64, JM Singh (Ind) 72 67 65 64, A Hansen (Den) 68 69 65
66, D Clarke 67 69 65 67
269 T Bjorn (Den) 68 71 66 64, A Cabrera (Arg) 68 69 65 67
270 V Phillips 68 67 69 66, J Bickerton 69 67 68 66, D Lynn 68 66 68 68, R
Green (Aus) 69 67 65 69
271 G Emerson 70 68 68 65, JM Olazabal (Spa) 69 67 68 67, G Owen 67 70 66 68,
C Rodiles (Spa) 65 70 67 69, P Price 66 69 67 69
272 I Garrido (Spa) 70 67 71 64, R Johnson (Swe) 73 65 67 67, B Lane 66 72 66
68, B Dredge 70 68 65 69
273 JM Carriles (Spa) 72 68 69 64, H Nystrom (Swe) 67 67 72 67, F Andersson
(Swe) 69 65 71 68, S Gallacher 64 70 70 69, P Harrington 63 72 69 69, D Higgins
67 62 69 75
274 I Garbutt 69 71 70 64, A Forsyth 69 67 71 67, D Smyth 65 73 67 69, MA
Jimenez (Spa) 65 67 70 72
275 E Romero (Arg) 70 67 72 66, M Lafeber (Ned) 71 69 68 67, R Winchester 71
65 72 67, C Pettersson (Swe) 70 70 67 68
276 M McNulty (Zim) 70 69 69 68, E Canonica (Ita) 70 70 67 69, S Luna (Spa) 72
68 67 69, P Mitchell 70 69 68 69, B Rumford (Aus) 71 69 66 70, J Rystrom (Swe)
67 67 71 71, D Howell 70 69 65 72
277 H Bjornstad (Nor) 70 69 72 66, S Dodd 71 65 72 69, T Gogele (Ger) 68 68 73
68
278 M Blackey 72 67 72 67, P Broadhurst 72 68 69 69, N Dougherty 71 67 71 69,
M Roe 67 70 70 71, D Fichardt (Rsa) 72 68 66 72, G Orr 70 68 68 72, W Riley
(Aus) 71 67 66 74
279 A Marshall 66 68 77 68
280 R Muntz (Ned) 71 69 72 68, P Casey 69 70 72 69, D Park 68 69 74 69, J
Quiros (Spa) 70 70 70 70, O Karlsson (Swe) 71 69 70 70, A Salto (Spa) 69 68 73
70, H Stenson (Swe) 71 68 70 71, M Farry (Fra) 67 71 71 71
281 F Roca (Spa) 67 68 76 70, G Storm 66 72 73 70, J-F Remesy (Fra) 70 68 73
70, S Hansen (Den) 69 69 72 71, M Reale (Ita) 68 70 72 71
282 L Parsons (Aus) 69 70 70 73
285 M Pilkington 70 69 74 72
292 M James 69 71 72 80