Pablo in form at Abu Dhabi
Pablo Larrazábal showed once again his fondness for 
picking up prestigious titles on The European Tour when he held off a stellar 
cast to claim the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship. The 30 year old Spaniard – whose previous Tour triumphs 
have come in the Alstom Open de France and the BMW International Open in Germany 
– carded a bold final round 67 on the National Course for a 14 under par total 
of 274 and a one shot victory over Rory McIlroy and Phil 
Mickelson. “I win when I can and I win when I have a chance to win,” 
said the former Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year. “But it was great to do it 
when all my family and my team were here. They know who they are they all know 
how hard I’ve worked for this. I thank them for supporting me and continuing to 
push me hard.” Larrazábal started the final round three shots behind 
leader Craig Lee, but as the Scot faded, the Spaniard seized the initiative. 
Reaching the turn in 32, further birdies at the 11th and 
13th saw him hit the front and when he two putted the final hole for 
his sixth birdie of the round, it set a target neither of his two illustrious 
pursuers could match. Mickelson, the reigning Open Champion, battled hard and 
produced his usual brand of golfing fireworks as he strove to close the gap. But 
the 43 year old Californian’s challenge was undone at the 13th where 
a double hit, while attempting to extricate himself right handed from a bush, 
saw him run up a triple bogey seven. “It never crossed my mind that I would double hit it,” 
said the American, who gamely fought to make up the lost ground with birdies on 
the 14th, 16th and 18th holes. “But I enjoy 
challenging myself to hit some shots. Sometimes they come off, and sometimes 
they don’t. This week I had a little bit of both.” Like Mickelson, joint runner-up McIlroy tried everything 
to make up ground on Larrazábal, but seven straight pars from the 
11th to the 17th saw him unable to do so; like Mickelson, 
his birdie four at the last leaving his total one shot shy of the 
mark. It did, of course, leave the Northern Irishman rueing the 
rules infringement he incurred during Saturday’s third round, a mistake which 
cost him a two shot penalty and, ultimately, the title. “I’m standing here and I feel I should be 15 under par for 
the tournament and the winner, not 13 under par and the runner-up,” he said. 
“But that’s the way it goes I suppose. I played the least shots of anyone here 
this week so I suppose I can count that as a moral victory. “But I’ve very happy with the week as a whole. I came in 
here telling everyone I was happy with my game and I think I’ve proved that by 
doing a lot of good work. So it’s fair to say I’m really excited about the rest 
of the season now.” Larrazábal’s fellow Spaniard Rafa Cabrera-Bello (68) – who 
held the lead at one stage during the front nine, slipped back to share fourth 
with South African George Coetzee (66) on 12 under par 276, while Dutchman Joost 
Luiten completed the top six with a 68 for ten under par 278.


0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home