China Open: Shiv Kapur T31; Wu wins

Shiv Kapur shot 71 in the final round of the China Open to finish T31

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Shiv Kapur and Jeev Milkha Singh will look to better their T33 performance when they tee off in Germany this week

 

Edited by Anand Datla

 

April 26, 2015: There was reason to feel positive and energised for Shiv Kapur, as the China Open drew to a close at the Tomson Shanghai Pudong Golf Club. The Indian had a steady week and despite a third round wobble, managed to finish T31 among a tough European Tour field in one of China’s biggest golfing events. Kapur shot a 71 in the final round to end the week in 31st alongside 10 other golfers. He won € 21,980 for his efforts this week, besides recording his best finish since the Thailand Classic in February. Ashun Wu managed to hold his nerve to clinch a one shot victory over David Howell.

 

Kapur made birdies at two of the first three holes to go two under and make a solid start on the final day of the China Open. But he gave one back to the course, when he made five at the par-4 sixth hole. After making the turn in 35 shots, Kapur added another birdie at the thirteenth hole only to return the favour immediately with a bogey at the next hole. He made four straight pars from there to complete his week with a 71.

 

Wu Ashun became the first Chinese player to win a European Tour event on home soil as he held off a spirited challenge from England’s David Howell at the Volvo China Open. The 29 year old shot a closing 71 at Tomson Shanghai Pudong Golf Club to finish on nine under par for the week – one shot ahead of Howell, who missed an eight foot par putt on the last which would have forced a play-off.

 

Wu, who primarily plies his trade on the Japan Golf Tour but now has exempt status on The European Tour, said: “It’s a wonderful day today. “Everyone knows it’s very tough today, I played very good today and I’ve enjoyed this week. It’s been a wonderful week with wonderful weather and I’d like to thank everybody. It’s very special winning the China Open and it’s very exciting. I have many friends here, and they helped me a lot and pushed me to play well.”

 

 

Wu and Howell both started the day in a four-way tie for the lead with last week’s runner-up Li Hao-tong and France’s defending champion Alex Levy.

 

Former Ryder Cup star Howell initially took the lead when he got up-and-down from the front bunker on the second for birdie, but he bogeyed the fourth after a poor chip and a birdie from 15 feet on the fifth took Wu one ahead.

 

Howell drew level with a birdie from 20 feet on the sixth and, after both he and Wu had bogeyed the short eighth from the sand, went ahead with a gain from six feet at the ninth.

 

Wu responded with a gain of his own from similar range at the tenth as the pair found themselves locked together on nine under.

 

Howell had birdied the 11th from 30 feet to take the lead on ten under once more. Howell’s approach to the 14th found a bunker and led to a bogey, and needing a gain coming down the closing stretch he missed first the 18th fairway and then the green before his crucial par putt slid by.

 

The Englishman said: “It’s obviously tough to take. I was in very good shape to win the tournament for most of the day, and didn’t get the job done. So it’s going to hurt for a while, but I didn’t do a lot wrong. I holed a lovely putt on 17 to save par to give myself every chance coming down the last. It felt like I was already in a play-off, because Ashun was in the clubhouse on nine under, so if I birdie the last I win the tournament, and if I make bogey I lose it. Unfortunately it was the latter.”

 

Levy, Emiliano Grillo and Prom Meesawat were tied for third on seven under par.

 

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Source: European Tour

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