Golfer Mukesh clinches Panasonic Open

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Golfer Mukesh clinches Panasonic Open

New Delhi, Dec 4 (IANS) Local veteran Mukesh Kumar completed a wire-to-wire victory at the weather-shortened Panasonic Open India to claim his first Asian Tour title by one shot at the Delhi Golf Club (DGC) here on Sunday.

Mukesh, who had a two-shot advantage heading into the third and final round, closed with a two-under-par 70 for a winning total of 10-under-par 206 at the $400,000 Asian Tour event, which was earlier reduced to 54 holes due to fog disruptions.

This victory made him the oldest winner on the Asian Tour at the age of 51 years and 126 days. Indian duo Jyoti Randhawa and Rashid Khan closed with matching 68s to share second place.

Mithun Perera of Sri Lanka capped his third consecutive top-five finish at the tournament after signing for a 70 to take fourth place on 208.

He is the only non-Indian to finish inside top-10 at the Asian Tour event, which celebrated its sixth edition this week.

The Indian golfer, who has won over 120 titles on the domestic circuit, was ecstatic to savour his career’s biggest win at the Panasonic Open.

“I am very proud of myself. I have waited 32 years for this. This means a lot to me. It feels different from the 123 wins that I have had on the domestic Tour before. I have been wanting to achieve this,” said Mukesh, who marked his card with three birdies against a bogey.

Mukesh saw his lead reduced to one after dropping a shot on third. He bounced back with two straight birdies from seven to regain his two-shot edge but was caught up by a fast-charging Randhawa, who sank his fourth birdie of the day on 15 to tie the lead.

The 50-year-old, however, kept his cool by nailing a crucial 20-footer birdie putt on 15, which proved decisive as he regained a one-shot lead before returning with three straight pars to clinch victory.

“The 20-footer that I made for birdie on 15 was the decisive putt for me. I knew I had a good chance after sinking that putt. I told myself I just need to par the last three holes. Even though I know Jyoti (Randhawa) was just one shot back and he has a good chance on 18 being a long-hitter, I didn’t think too much about that. I just focused on what I need to do,” added he.

Randhawa, who was bidding for a ninth Asian Tour win and a fifth at the course, tipped his hat to Kumar for being a deserving winner.

“I am very happy for Mukesh. He played well for his first Asian Tour victory so hats off to him. It’s great for him because it’s his first international win after so many years of playing on the local Tour. I did my best today. Maybe just one shot was bad but this is golf for you. As long as you do your best, it’s alright,” said the 44-year-old, Asia’s number one in 2002.

Randhawa took pride in his commendable result, which marked his second top-five finish in the last one month on the Asian Tour.

“It has been a great week for me. My game has been improving. There is surely a lot of positives to take from this week. It gives me a lot of confidence heading into the season finale in Hong Kong next week.”

Khan battled against a wrist injury to cap his best finish on the Asian Tour this season.

“I started very well today, except on the fourth where I hit it to the right and took a drop in the bunker. But I made a very really good bogey there. I gave myself a few more chances after that but unfortunately I wasn’t able to take advantage of them,” said the 25-year-old Indian.

“It was only until 14 that I started to make birdies again. That gave me a lot of confidence and I went on to birdie 15 and 18. I had to play aggressively. I missed a short putt for birdie on 16 which was disappointing but overall, it was good. I am happy to finish well this week. I did my best,” added the two-time Asian Tour winner.


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