| Howell
is champion David
Howell showed himself to be a fearless front runner for the second time in three
months when he captured the Dubai Desert Classic at Dubai Creek Golf & Yacht Club.
The 23-year-old from Swindon, who won the Australian PGA by a runaway margin
of seven strokes in November, claimed his first European Tour title with an emphatic
four shot success in Dubai. A closing five under par 67 ensured that
the title was in Howell’s safe keeping a long way from home, and he was permitted
the luxury of bogeying the last hole to win in style with a 13 under par total
of 275. Victory was worth 198,324 euro to the tall, slender Howell, who
edged his more famous stablemate, Lee Westwood, into second place on 279. Europe’s
Ryder Cup captain, Mark James, and Irishman, Paul McGinley, shared third place
a further stroke behind on 280. That win propelled him to the top of
the Volvo Order of Merit and he said: "This is a big day for me. Hopefully I can
now play in the majors, although my ultimate aspirations are to be No1 and play
in the Ryder Cup. I’ve promised myself that it comes this year, in two years time
or in 10 years time I want to make it." Westwood, who missed the cut
on his first outing of the year last week, shot rounds of 69 and 67 over the weekend
to hint at a return to form. He was full of praise for his friend and commented:
"It’s a fantastic performance by David. He played nicely in the Taiheiyo Masters
at the end of the year in Japan and that gave him a clue that he was a better
player than he gave himself credit for." McGinley, who is also in the
same management company as Howell, was eqully effusive. He said: "He’s a streaky
player but solid. I’m delighted for him. He’s a lovely guy, very composed and
to lead the tournament and play that aggressive is fantastic." McGinley,
like Westwood and Howell, finished with a 67 to shared third spot with James,
whose 69 surprised even the normally placid Ryder Cup skipper. He said: "I played
better than I expected." Colin Montgomerie fired his third 70 out of
four rounds to tie for fifth. He claimed his putting was just a little off but
declared himself happy with his week’s work before heading to America for the
Andersen Consulting World Match Play.
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