Low Graphics Site
White bar
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story


October 20, 2003 Monday Sha'aban 23, 1424

Click to learn more...
Please Visit our Sponsor (Ads open in separate window)



Els’s easy triumph equals record


VIRGINIA WATER (England), Oct 19: Ernie Els collected a record-equalling World Match Play Championship title and a one million pounds ($1.67 million) prize after comfortably beating Thomas Bjorn 4&3 at Wentworth on Sunday.

The big South African, ranked second in the world, joined countryman Gary Player and Spain’s Seve Ballesteros as the only men to win the event five times after a disappointingly one-sided final which was at least lifted by a hole-in-one from an otherwise out-of-sorts Bjorn at the 179-yard 14th.

Holder and top seed Els was never headed by the Dane in the 36-hole shootout over the West Course and had taken control by the halfway stage to lead by three holes.

Bjorn, a member of the victorious 2002 European Ryder Cup team but unseeded here, lacked the inspiration to dent Els’s dominance after a break for lunch and a miscued approach shot cost him further ground at the fifth hole of the second round.

He then badly hooked his drive at the ninth to land in thick undergrowth from which there was no escape and Els found himself five holes up with nine to play.

Bjorn’s woes continued at the next after another poor tee shot failed to locate the short 10th green. He pulled one hole back with a 25-foot putt for eagle at the long 12th and then another at the short 14th where his four-iron tee-shot ran straight into the hole to the delight of a sympathetic gallery.

Bjorn won a 37,000 pounds ($62,000) Toyota car for the ace, only the third in the tournament’s 39-year history.

MURAYAMA STILL AHEAD


GREENSBORO (North Carolina): Japan’s Shigeki Maruyama recorded his highest score at the Greensboro Classic on Saturday but his two-under-par 70 still kept him three shots clear of Brad Faxon after three rounds.

Leading third round scores:

199 — Shigeki Maruyama (Japan) 65, 64, 70.

202 — Brad Faxon 67, 67, 68.

205 — Peter Lonard (Australia) 68, 70, 67; Matt Gogel 70, 67, 68; K.J. Choi (South Korea) 68, 69, 68.

206 — Robert Allenby (Australia) 70, 70, 66; Steven Alker (New Zealand) 70, 68, 68; Stuart Appleby (Australia) 68, 70, 68; David Sutherland 71, 66, 69; Stephen Ames (Trinidad & Tobago) 64, 71, 71.

207 — David Toms 65, 74, 68; Jeff Brehaut 69, 70, 68; Per-Ulrik Johansson (Sweden) 71, 66, 70; Jay Haas 69, 68, 70; Peter Jacobsen 63, 74, 70; Jonathan Byrd 66, 70, 71; Dicky Pride 66, 70, 71; Paul Gow (Australia) 66, 69, 72.—Reuters



Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2005