PUNTA CANA, Dominican Republic — England’s Matt Wallace won his first PGA Tour title with an impressive victory in the Corales Puntacana Championship.
Wallace carded a final round of 66 in the Dominican Republic to finish on 19 under par, a shot ahead of Denmark’s Nicolai Hojgaard.
The 32-year-old Londoner, who finished seventh in the Valspar Championship last week, got off to a poor start with a bogey on the second, but responded superbly with birdies on the third, fourth and seventh.
Wallace then made four birdies in a row from the 13th to move into a two-shot lead before Hojgaard closed the gap with a birdie on the par-three 17th, but the 22-year-old was unable to pick up another shot on the last to force a play-off.
Wallace, who hit the headlines for getting into an argument with his caddie Sam Bernard during the Valspar Championship last week, said: “Everyone knows I’m a feisty character but that got me through that today.
“I was calm, I was determined. I kind of felt like I had it in me all week. I really felt like I was playing some really good stuff and I felt like I was going to be up there at the end of the week no matter what.
“I didn’t get off to the start I wanted today but kept at it and Sam was brilliant, so positive, and the way I finished was exactly how I feel like I can play golf.
“That was awesome down the final few holes and I’m really proud of myself.
“I knew I was playing some good stuff, I just had to let it come out because that’s the hardest bit sometimes – you stop yourself from playing good golf.
“I’m proud of how I dealt with that and the bogey today, I birdied the third hole straight away after the bogey and the back nine was brilliant.”
Elsewhere, Taichi Kho overcame final-round nerves to become the first Hong Kong player to win an Asian Tour event at a rain-shortened World City Championship.
Kho only turned professional in January but held off New Zealand’s Michael Hendry to win by two strokes at a soggy Hong Kong Golf Club and claim a place at this year’s Open Championship.
Organisers reduced the tournament to 54 holes overnight after heavy rain and lightning led to play being called off.
The course was still suffering the effects of the bad weather when play resumed on Sunday, with Kho holding a four-shot lead over Miguel Tabuena of the Philippines.
“Being at home, in front of everyone, having my parents here, it just means the world to me. I want to say thank you to everyone,” Kho said according to AFP.
“I can’t put into words how grateful I am to have this opportunity. The fans gave me a lot of momentum, thank you to Hong Kong,” the 22-year-old said.
Kho struggled when play resumed, dropping shots at the third and sixth holes to see his lead over Tabuena cut in half.
To the delight of his home fans, Kho got his game back on track by holing out from about 45 metres for a much-needed birdie at the par-four ninth hole.
Tabuena, fresh from winning the DGC Open in New Delhi last week, started disastrously with a double-bogey six at the first and, despite a birdie two at the next hole, never really recovered.
South Korea’s Bio Kim and Australian Travis Smyth raced up the leaderboard while Kho steadied and Tabuena faltered.
Another bogey at the par-four 11th saw Kho’s lead cut to a single shot over the hard-charging Smyth and another Korean, Yoseop Seo.
Successive birdies at the next two holes, including almost holing his tee shot at the 12th, restored Kho’s lead to three and he finished with an even-par 70 for a three-round total of 198.
“I definitely wasn’t fearless, I was nervous, which was perfectly natural in the moment, but I said to myself I will be a better player by the end of it,” Kho said.
Importantly, victory at the inaugural World City Championship, only Kho’s third professional tournament, earned him a place in The Open Championship at Royal Liverpool in July.
Kho’s playing partner Hendry calmly compiled a two-under round of 68 for second place, with Smyth finishing third on 201.