• Soderberg wins as McIlroy falls short

    Sebastian Soderberg
    Sweet victory

    Sebastian Soderberg came through a five man play-off featuring World No 2 Rory McIlroy to win his first European Tour title at the Omega European Masters.

    The Swede started the day four shots off the lead and remained there at the turn before he made five birdies in a row to surge to the top of the leaderboard.

    Christiaan Bezuidenhout (70) and Erik van Rooyen (67) earned €36,313 for finishing T12

    A three putt on the 17th then dropped him into the play-off at 14 under with playing partners McIlroy and Lorenzo Gagli, Andres Romero and Kalle Samooja as we went to extra holes at Crans-sur-Sierre Golf club for the sixth time in seven years.

    The 28-year-old holed a ten footer for birdie on the first trip back up the last and, with McIlroy and Samooja missing from closer range, the trophy was his.

    It was a thrilling finish to an enthralling day as all the main contenders came to life in the closing stages to take the event to a record equalling 13th play-off in its history.

    Victory for Soderberg comes in his 50th European Tour event after he came through the Qualifying School in 2016 and the European Challenge Tour last season.

    He has two wins on the Challenge Tour but sat 120th on the Race to Dubai coming into this week after securing a top five on home soil at last week’s Scandinavian Invitation.

    ‘I was shaking the last few holes in the round,’ said Soderberg, who had his brother as his caddie. ‘I calmed down a little bit for the play-off. I’m very proud of myself to be able to play good when I’m shaking.

    ‘I felt like I had nothing to lose and just played as aggressive as I could. I was way more calm down the play-off than I was in my last few holes out there in the fourth round.

    ‘I was just trying to take one shot at a time and my brother told me most likely my card was secured when we’d finished, which was nice. I had nothing to lose at all and it’s going to change a lot going forward.’

    Soderberg bogeyed the first and birdied the driveable seventh to turn in 35 but it was a chip-in at the tenth that ignited his charge.

    He holed long putts at the 11th and 12th and when he made another slippery one from distance on the 13th that sneaked in on the right side, he held the solo lead.

    Samooja was not in the mood to be outdone and – after also bogeying the first – the Finn birdied the eighth and ninth and holed two long putts of his own on the 12th and 13th to get into a share, before Soderberg edged back ahead as he got up and down from sand on the 14th.

    McIlroy was seeking redemption after bogeying the last and losing a play-off at this event in his rookie season 11 years ago but he looked a long way from making extra holes at two over for his round after ten.

    The Northern Irishman birdied the 12th and 13th to get back to level and then took advantage of the back to back par fives at the 14th and 15th but he was still two behind.

    A slippery right to lefter on the 17th had him within one and Gagli was also at 14 under when he followed him in after an impressive run of his own.

    The Italian had double bogeyed the first but birdied the fifth, sixth and tenth before dropping a shot on the 11th. He then made the most of the 15th and almost aced the 16th, joining a four man tie when Soderberg three putted the next from ten feet.

    Overnight leader Romero tumbled down the leaderboard as he bogeyed the first, third and fifth and he was still three over for his round before he made the most of the back nine’s pair of par fives.

    An approach to tap-in range at the 17th then put him in the play-off but he missed the green with his second as Gagli found the water on the trip back up the 18th, leaving the other three players over their birdie putts for the dramatic finale.

    Spain’s Adri Arnaus fired a 64 to finish a shot out of the play-off alongside Frenchman Mike-Lorenzo Vera, one shot clear of Australians Lucas Herbert and Wade Ormsby, Englishman Tommy Fleetwood and Austrian Matthias Schwab.

     

    Article written by

    ×