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ASIAN GOLF TODAY TOP STORIES

GOLF TODAY TOP STORIES 
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Harris tops class in Q-school finals
American
Corey Harris won the Asian Tour Qualifying School Finals today while
amateurs Jin Yong-gab of Korea and Australian Vernon Sexton-Finck
made a slice of history by earning their Tour cards with top-40
finishes.
Harris, the leader since the first day, shot an even par 72 in the
final round at Palm Resort Golf and Country Club's Cempaka Course
to top the class with his four-day total of 15-under-par 273. Australian
David Bransdon finished second, three behind following a 72 on a
blustery day.
"Mission accomplished," said a smiling Harris (pictured),
whose round included three birdies and three bogeys. "My swing
didn't feel good today but I stayed patient and kept telling myself
that pars were good," added the Conneticut-native, who spent
a month practising in Thailand prior to the school.
Korean amateur, 22-year-old Jin, showed his immense potential by
earning his Asian Tour card despite an anxious finish with a 76,
which included four bogeys and one double bogey. But he held his
nerve to make grade in tied 22nd place, the first Asian amateur
to do so following a regulation change a few years ago which allowed
amateurs to compete in Qualifying Schools. Finck, a 25-year-old
amateur from Western Australia, shot a 69 to also finish equal 22nd.
"I am so happy and proud of myself," said Jin, who only
took up golf six years ago. "I started so badly with three
bogeys as I was aiming for a low score but settled down into the
round. I'm going to turn professional now and I hope to play well
on the Asian Tour."
India's Shiv Kapur was amongst those who made the grade in the
gruelling test which started with over 400 players competing in
Stage One. The former Asian Games gold medal winner enjoyed a chip-in
birdie at the last hole en route to a bogey-free 68 to earn his
Asian Tour card in tied 10th position. "It feels good, I feel
a lot lighter," said Kapur (pictured left). "I played
well today and it's pleasing to get my card.
"On the first tee this morning, I felt more pressure than
the first three days. I knew it was an important round and it was
a bit gut-wrenching when I was even par through six holes."
While the Asian Tour will welcome new faces when the first event
of 2005 tees off later this month with the Caltex Masters presented
by Carlsberg, Singapore, some old faces will also make a welcome
return.
Filipino Felix Casas, returning from a two-year injury layoff,
birdied two of his last four holes to safely secure his Asian Tour
card with a final round 71 that placed him tied 15th. "I feel
great. This is my last chance to come good in my career. I've knocked
on doors in the past but they've never opened for me. Maybe this
time.
"I'll continue training hard with my coach back home and carry
on with my fitness programme. But I do need to be sharper in my
game, especially my short irons," said Casas, once touted as
the man likely to replace Frankie Minoza as the Filipino star.
It was a nerve-wracking wait for many players. Those on three-under-par
285 were given a lifeline in their careers, thanks to Australian
Pat Giles. Playing in the third last group, Giles three putted the
17th from 15 feet for bogey en route to a 76 and dropped into a
tie for 40th place with 10 others. If he had not bogeyed that hole,
the cut off for an Asian Tour card would have been one shot higher
at 284.
Those who benefited were three Malaysians, Rashid Ismail, M. Sasidaran
and P. Gunasegaran, all on 285. Rashid birdied the 18th hole en
route to a 72 and conceded he got lucky. "I three putted the
15th and the birdie on 18 gave me the lifeline. It was a nervous
wait to know what the cut mark was," said Rashid, last year's
Malaysian PGA circuit number one.
Leading final round scores
273: Corey HARRIS (USA) 64-68-69-72
276: David BRANSDON (Aus) 66-70-68-72
277: Paul MARANTZ (Aus) 68-70-71-68, Shannon JONES (Aus) 70-67-70-70,
Ross BAIN (Sco) 69-64-72-72
278: Adam BLYTH (Aus) 71-72-67-68
279: SUNG Mao-Chang (Tpe) 70-70-71-68, Alex QUIROZ (Mex) 71-71-69-68,
Jochen LUPPRIAN (Ger) 68-67-74-70
280: Shiv KAPUR (Ind) 69-71-72-68, JO Hyo-Jun (Kor) 70-71-70-69,
Scott STRANGE (Aus) 70-69-71-70
281: Dean ALABAN (Aus) 70-69-75-67, Chris TRAVERS (Aus) 70-69-71-71
January 15, 2005
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