Aussie Ian Stanley will be
taking home more than the £79,000 winner's cheque thanks
to his play-off win over Bob Charles in the Senior British Open
at Royal County Down a yellow stake.
Needing a par at he 18th to
win in regulation holes, the 52 year old three putted in similar
fashion to Retief Goosen at last month's US Open, before beating
Charles with a par five at the first play-off hole.
Charles finished with a three
under par 68 to Stanley's 69 as they tied on six under par with
Nicklaus second, three shots further back.
But the wine loving Aussie
Melbourne was saved earlier by an incredible piece of luck at
the 17th. A stroke clear of the left handed New Zealander at
that stage, Stanley's tee shot was prevented from running into
the water hazard by one of the yellow stakes that marks the hazard.
The Australian was able to
remove it and make a safe par four on his way to his first Senior
Major victory.
He said afterwards: "The
stake is going in my golf bag after that. I guess you need a
little bit of luck. On the 18th I had two putts to win and when
I rushed the first one past I thought of Retief Goosen.
"When I missed I said
to my caddie, okay, let's go to the playoff and think positive.
You need a break now and again and really my putting was great
all week."
Charles, 65, started the day
a shot behind Stanley but was never out of touch. Out in one
under par to Stanley's two under, he birdied the 12th and 13th
to tie for the lead before dropping a shot at the difficult 15th
where he missed the fairway.
Although Stanley chipped to
two feet to birdie the 16th and stretch his lead to two, Charles
never gave up and drained an 18 footer at the 17th to get to
within one of the Australian.
Gifted another chance in the
play-off after Stanley's three-putt blunder, the 1963 British
Open champion drove into a fairway bunker when he played the
hole again in the play-off and could do no better than a bogey
six.
But Stanley also had to survive
a typical final day charge by Golden Bear Jack Nicklaus. The
18 time major winner started out just three behind Stanley and
almost got in the frame.
He was still three behind the
Australian at the turn before he started one of his famous back
nine charges with a birdie two at the 197-yard 10th. Stanley
birdied he ninth to go back three in front before the Bear struck
one of the shots of the championship at the 479 yard par five
12th. After driving right into the rough, 209 yards from the
green, he fired a superb five iron that clipped the pin and finished
just six feet away.
Nicklaus gratefully drained
the eagle putt but after that his challenge faded. A bogey at
the 15th started the rot and when birdie putts of three and eight
feet failed to drop at the 16th and 17th he was just too far
behind.
Said Nicklaus: "I thought
I had a good chance to win the golf tournament. But again today
I was disappointed with my finish.
"I've enjoyed playing
here this week and playing at least once in the British Seniors
and I have that on my record. Will I come back? That depends
on how much golf I play in the future. I want to get a couple
of physical problems fixed first."
Tipperary amateur Arthur Pierse
clinched the amateur medal with a final round of 76 and head
back to Tipperary to ponder his future.
Said Pierse: "I achieved
what I came here to do which was to get the medal. My objective
this year was to qualify for the US and British Senior Opens
and play all four rounds and I have done it."
But Pierse, who runs a garage
business in Tipperary, will have to think seriously about dedicating
himself to a full time career on one of the professional tours.
"To compete at this level
you need to playing competitively every week and getting paid
for it. For me to give this game the time it needs to compete
at this level I would have to give up my job for half the year.
"At the moment my chipping
around the greens is just not sharp enough and I couldn't take
advantage of the par fives I had a bogey and double bogey
at two of them today."
Ulsterman Eddie Polland was
the leading Irishman on five over par thanks to a one under par
70 yesterday. Kenny Stevenson shot 73 ton fish nine over, with
Denis O'Sullivan (75) 13 over total and Paul Leonard (82) 27
over finishing well down the field.
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©
Brian Keogh 2001
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