Westwood
snatches victory after record 63Lee
Westwood set his sights on knocking Colin Montgomerie off his perch as European
number one after winning the TNT Dutch Open in Hilversum. The
26-year-old from Worksop came from five shots behind to equal his own course record
with a brilliant closing 63, eight under par, and snatch the £133,000 first
prize. His 15
under total of 269 saw him finish one shot ahead of overnight leader Gary Orr
of Scotland, with Argentinian Eduardo Romero and Australian Jarrod Moseley a shot
further behind. It
was Westwood's first victory in Europe this season after an injury-plagued year
but he has far from given up hope of preventing Montgomerie from taking a record
seventh consecutive Order of Merit title. "I'd
love to win it," said Westwood who was involved in a season-long duel with
Montgomerie and stable-mate Darren Clarke in 1998. "It's
nice to be back in the chase with my first win of the year. I'd finished fifth,
seventh, fifth and then 18th at the Open in my last four events but there's nothing
like a win to shoot you right up there. "I'm
still quite a way behind Colin but it's a big week next week and back to back
wins is not out of the question. "It's
a big win in terms of building up some momentum and it's always nice to win to
give you confidence with a lot of big tournaments coming up." Victory
had looked a faint possibility after an opening round of one over par 72 left
him five shots off the pace and complaining of "putting like a chump." But
after abandoning his experiment with a new set of clubs he also discovered some
rhythm on the greens and followed up with rounds of 68, 66, and 63 to snatch victory
and move up to second in the Ryder Cup table and fourth in the Order of Merit. "I
wasn't sure how far the new clubs were going to go so after the first round I
got TNT to bring my old set out - which is a good mention for the sponsor! - and
they arrived 45 minutes before my second round. "For
the next three rounds I was 16 under and today I holed three putts over 15ft which
is the first time I've done that for a long time. "I'm
still not entirely happy with my putting but it's a lot better and obviously I'm
delighted with the win." Orr
looked capable of taking the tournament into extra holes when he birdied the 16th
to be just one stroke behind with the par five 18th - an excellent birdie opportunity
- still to come. But
he three putted for a bogey on the 17th and his brave 18ft birdie on the last
was only good enough for second place on his own and a cheque for £88,878. "It's
no big deal, it's only a game of golf," Orr insisted afterwards. "I
player pretty well but just made a couple of silly mistakes and I can't really
complain. "I
took the wrong club on the eighth and 13th and made bogey each time. "I
wasn't looking at the leaderboards but I knew someone would come out of the bunch.
I'm not disappointed because if you don't play well you don't do yourself justice. "If
someone beats you fair and square then good luck to them." Darren
Clarke had to settle for a share of fifth place after a closing 70 while Bernhard
Langer's tie for 15th, and Andrew Coltart's joint 20th were enough to move them
into ninth and 10th respectively in the Ryder Cup points standings.
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