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Kiwi Muir powers to Electric finish in Suzhou

China Daily | Updated: 2023-10-23 08:58
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Late birdie blitz sees off rivals as New Zealander claims second China Tour title

Kieran Muir of New Zealand poses with the trophy after winning the Mitsubishi Electric FA Golf Open by one stroke in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, on Sunday. Provided to China Daily

New Zealander Kieran Muir birdied three of the final four holes to win the Mitsubishi Electric FA Golf Open by one stroke in Jiangsu province on Sunday.

The Kiwi took advantage of a late collapse by China's Ye Jianfeng (72), who led for much of the final round at Suzhou Taihu International Golf Club, to claim his second career China Tour title. He signed off with a 71 for an 11-under 277 total, enough to earn a winner's check of 90,000 yuan ($12,000).

Li Linqiang, the China Tour Order of Merit leader, roared up the leaderboard with a final-round 67 to finish third, two shots back. Zhou Yanhan was the top amateur as the 15-year-old Chongqing native closed with a 68 to finish three shots off the pace in equal fourth with Czech Gordan Brixi, whose 65 was the lowest round of the tournament.

Muir and Ye went into the final round as co-leaders on 10-under. As Muir could only muster 10 straight pars to start, Ye vaulted into a two-shot lead with birdies at the second and fourth holes. Muir picked up his first birdie at the 427-yard (390-meter) 11th to get within a stroke of Ye.

After both players made bogey five at the 448-yard 12th, Muir looked out of it when he made further bogeys over the next two holes to fall three strokes behind. Starting at the 15th hole, however, Muir began a run of three straight birdies that would prove the difference.

China's Ye Jianfeng led by a stroke with two holes to play, but paid the price for a wayward tee shot and a double bogey five on the 17th hole, and had to settle for second place. Provided to China Daily

With Ye holding a one-stroke lead going into the penultimate hole, his tee shot with a pitching wedge at the 149-yard par-three found water. As Ye would stumble to a double-bogey five, Muir made a 70-foot (21-meter) birdie putt for a two-shot lead in what would be a three-shot swing.

At the final hole, Muir made a par five as Ye sank a five-foot birdie putt to get close.

"Any win is special. It's very hard to win a golf tournament anywhere in the world. To win here again is really nice, makes me feel good. I'm a second-time winner, so that's good," said Muir who turns 36 on Wednesday.

"Ye played very, very well. He had a really nice start and I got close and then I made three bogeys. Then I think 'tough work now'. But I re-center, go back to my processes. I find a good place and make three birdies. Unfortunately, Benny (Ye) missed his swing on 17. But he's a great competitor and he deserves all he got this week. He's a good player."

Ye's runner-up finish marked his best result at a China Tour event, but he felt it was a missed opportunity to collect his first win as a pro.

The 32-year-old said he injured himself at the Volvo China Open Qualifying Tournament in August. The following month, he finished seventh at the Guotai Open before missing the cut last week in Hainan.

"I felt relaxed at the 17th tee. I hit a good tee shot but I don't know what happened. As I said before, this is the will of heaven. I did my best and I just have to accept it," said the Guangzhou-based Ye.

"I didn't play golf for a month because of my injury, but I have made a lot of progress since Hainan. I will try again next week (in Zhejiang)."

Despite finishing fourth against a professional field, top amateur Zhou was anything but happy with his final round after coming out red hot with six birdies over the first seven holes.

Next week, the teenager will play in the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship in Melbourne, Australia.

"I am not satisfied with this score since I had a really fantastic start," said Zhou, who sits 95th in the world amateur rankings. "I made a 25-footer for a birdie at the first hole. My tee shots were great. My putter worked, too. After that, my putts didn't drop, much to my disappointment."

Leading final-round scores:

Suzhou Taihu International Golf Club; par-72, 7,230 yards.

277 — Kieran Muir (NZL) 68-66-72-71

278 — Ye Jianfeng 69-69-68-72

279 — Li Linqiang 70-73-69-67

280 — Gordan Brixi (CZE) 68-73-74-65, Zhou Yanhan* 66-76-70-68

281 — Lawrence Ting (TPE) 70-72-68-71

282 — Zhang Zihong 72-73-68-69, Alexander Yang* (HKG) 66-71-74-71

283 — Zhang Huilin 72-71-73-67

284 — Pang Ming 71-71-71-71

285 — Zhang Changlei 68-77-68-72, Gregory Foo (SIN) 67-72-72-74

286 — Jung Woo-jin (KOR) 72-74-71-69, Nicklaus Chiam (SIN) 71-71-71-73

288 — Chen Dinggen 72-75-73-68, Sun Yan 67-74-74-73, Lu Wenlong 74-69-73-72,

Fan Shiyu 70-72-73-73, Luo Xuewen 67-76-73-72, Zhao Xingwu 69-72-73-74

Players are from Chinese mainland unless noted (*denotes amateur)

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