Otaegui wins Scottish Championship, Shubhankar finishes with 68

Adrian Otaegui produced a brilliant closing round 63 to storm to his first victory on the European Tour at the Scottish Championship

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Adrian Otaegui wins Scottish Championship

Adrian Otaegui produced a brilliant closing round of 63 to storm to his first 72-hole stroke play victory on the European Tour at the Scottish Championship presented by AXA. India’s Shubhankar Sharma carded four-under-68 in the final round and lying in T37.

Sharma carded five birdies and a bogey in the final round to close with seven under total. Fellow Indian S.S.P. Chawrasia carded five birdies and three bogeys to card 2-under 70 and finish in T51.

The Spaniard Otaegui, has shown himself to be an expert at head to head battles, winning both the Saltire Energy Paul Lawrie Match Play and the Belgian Knockout, and he showed all those skills again as it came down to a three man contest at Fairmont St Andrews.

Otaegui entered the day two shots off the lead of Matt Wallace but eight birdies in 11 holes from the fifth helped him finish at 23 under, four clear of the Englishman.

Aaron Rai continued his recent excellent form to finish at 17 under, a shot clear of fellow Englishmen Chris Paisley and Garrick Porteous, with the latter challenging for the title until falling away down the stretch.

After an opening round of 62, Otaegui’s 63 bookended his week beautifully and saw him get over the line after three runner up finishes in stroke play events, including this season’s English Championship.

A three time Qualifying School and one time European Challenge Tour graduate, Otaegui has truly established himself on Tour since being a joint winner of the Q School in 2015, and he now has a stroke play, match play and medal match play victory on his CV.

Wallace had dropped just one shot all week but his tee shot on the first ended up behind a wall and he made a bogey after chipping out sideways.

Otaegui holed a 25 footer on the first and birdied from even further out on the par three fifth but it was Porteous who soon reeled in the leader.

After both he and Wallace made the most of the short par four fourth with birdies from inside ten feet, Porteous holed an 18 footer on the fifth and made a birdie from 15 feet on the next to make it three in a row.

Otaegui was the only member of the final group to take advantage of the driveable seventh and his birdie from eight feet had him within one.

A tee shot to six feet that almost found the hole on the eighth handed him a share as Wallace made a bogey after a poor tee shot, and Otaegui led on his own at the turn as he put an approach shot to 15 feet on the ninth.

All three of the leading pack dropped shots on the tenth as Wallace needed a drop off the tee and Oategui and Porteous failed to get up and down, but the leader extended his advantage to two with a tee shot to tap in range at the 11th.

A trio of birdies from the final group after approaches to inside ten feet followed and it truly looked like a three horse race as Otaegui holed a long putt from off the green at the 13th and Porteous made a birdie of his own from seven feet.

Porteous failed to get up and down from over the back of the 14th and Otaegui led by three, before he and Poretous both birdied the next after getting inside six feet.

Porteous then double bogeyed the 16th after leaving his second shot in the rough and dropped another on the next, with Wallace moving into second after a tee shot to seven feet on the 17th handed him a 71.

Otaegui played it safe down the last but was still able to claim a tenth birdie of the day thanks to a beautiful third.

Porteous’ late slip saw him sign for a 71 and allowed Rai to take third after a bogey free 66 with gains on the first, third, fourth, seventh, 12th and last.

Paisley carded a closing 68 to sit a shot clear of Frenchman Adrien Saddier and two ahead of England’s Marcus Armitage and Northern Irishman Jonathan Caldwell.

European Tour Release, Oct 18, 2020