Rookie
win for RobertsonScotland's
Dean Robertson, from the same management stable as world snooker finalists Stephen
Hendry and Mark Williams, was on Sunday celebrating his first victory on the European
golf tour. The
28-year-old from Paisley won the Fiat and Fila Italian Open in Turin by one stroke
from former Walker Cup team-mate Padraig Harrington. Robertson
claimed the £119,042 first prize with a closing round of 68 for a 17 under
par total of 271. Remarkably, he is the seventh first-time winner in the last
10 tour events and, even more amazingly, he had missed the halfway cut in eight
of his 11 starts this season. American
Open champion Lee Janzen, on a rare visit to Europe, finished only 66th and Robertson
said: "I think Mr Janzen would have got a surprise about the depth of the
European tour this week. "My
legs were shaking the last few holes, but I held my nerve. "I
told some friends a few weeks that despite my record this year I'd never hit the
ball so well. I said that at the odds (over 100-1) I was worth a bet - I hope
they did it!" Among
the first people on the telephone was manager Ian Doyle from The Crucible in Sheffield. "It's
four years since I signed up Dean and I always knew it was only a question of
time," Doyle said. "I'm delighted for him - he's worked so hard." Dubliner
Harrington, who had led by one overnight, bogeyed the 16th and 17th, but Robertson
missed the chance to go three clear by three-putting the 17th as well. Harrington
then made a 15-foot birdie putt on the last, but by then the Canadian-born Scot
had putted up to less than 18 inches and after telling his caddie "my legs
have gone, but my mind's on the job" he knocked in the title-winning putt. What
Harrington's putt did was break a four-way tie for second with English pair Gary
Evans and Russell Claydon and also Welshman Phil Price, who had finished with
a superb 63. The
putt was worth nearly £32,000 - he took home £79,357 rather than £47,517
- but he said: "It didn't count for much. I wanted to win. "But
Dean played great and thoroughly deserved to win. Apart from the 17th he didn't
put a foot wrong all day. "To
be honest, my short game has been neglected and it caught up with me." He
had lost the outright lead by bogeying the 405-yard fourth after a slow play warning
and never got it back. Robertson,
who with his win goes fourth on this year's Order of Merit and 16th on the Ryder
Cup table, had led the Volvo PGA championship at Wentworth with five to play last
May, but fell back to fifth. "That
stood me in good stead," he said. "It's difficult to control adrenalin
and I was fighting it more there, but today I went with it and told myself not
to get stage fright and that it was natural. "I've
had chats with Stephen Hendry and he said the key to his success was his practice.
Missing so many cuts this year did at least give me more time for practice!" Price
had made the cut on Friday with a 90-foot eagle putt on his final hole and even
then never expected to be in with a chance. But
his nine birdies set the target of 15 under and Claydon and Evans were able only
to match it after scoring 66 and 68 respectively. Meanwhile,
Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal closed with a 66 for joint 13th spot and
Seve Ballesteros had his best round for almost a year and his best finish for
even longer. Having
failed to make a single cut all season until last week's Spanish Open, Ballesteros
finished 17th after a closing 67. The
42-year-old, who has been fighting a stiff neck this week as well as knee and
back problems, still entertained thoughts of winning when he turned in 31. He
was lying fifth then and it would have taken an inward 30 just for a play-off
as later events turned out, but two birdies were cancelled out by two bogeys. Ballesteros,
at the centre of controversy a week ago over a wrong drop which many players thought
should have led to his disqualification, appeared not to have forgotten the incident. "I
let my game talk for me," he said. "I just keep quiet. A lot of things
have been said on this and that, so I'll wait for my moment. "It
will come. I don't know when, but I am in no hurry." Olazabal
commented: "I love to see Seve up there. He still has his short game and
as soon as he hits it straight with the fighting spirit he has he is going to
win more tournaments. "If
he keeps playing like this I think he has a pretty good chance of a Ryder Cup
wild card. And you never know, he may not need a wild card. I'll be happy if that
happens." On
that Ballesteros, who gave up the captaincy to try to fight his way back, did
not commit himself. He
knows that after falling outside the world's top 450 he has taken only a few steps
on the road back and said: "I've played in the Ryder Cup eight times. It's
not the end of the world if I don't make it." |