Tyrrell Hatton outduels Nicolas Colsaerts, becomes first player to win Alfred Dunhill Links thrice

Tyrrell Hatton can smile on a golf course.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — If there’s any room left on the plinth of the Old Tom Morris statue, they may have to plonk a bronze bust of Tyrrell Hatton onto it at this rate.

Victory in the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship over the Old Course on Sunday was the Englishman’s third success in the Pro-Am contest. In the home of the game, Hatton once again prospered in his golfing home from home.

It all came down to a shoot-out on the 18th as Hatton and the gallant Belgian, Nicolas Colsaerts, marched up the final hole in a tie at the top. Things were so tight, you half expected them to reach for their dueling pistols as they clumped over Grannie Clark’s Wynd.

Hatton made his statement of intent when he dunted a neatly executed chip to within three feet. Over to you Nicolas.

Colsaerts opted for the putter from around 25 yards but, having struggled with the long ones for much of the day, his eagle attempt came up about 10-feet short.

The former Ryder Cup player, who trundled in a brave putt from a similar distance on the 17th to keep himself in a share of the lead, couldn’t make this one for his birdie, though.

Hatton stepped in to gobble up his own birdie from short range to post a 2-under 70 for a 24-under aggregate and a narrow, one-shot victory.

As well as the silverware and a check for $800,000, Hatton’s win also secures the LIV Golf player a spot in the DP World’s season-ending bonanza in Dubai in November. The fact his dad, Jeff, was by his side as part of the Pro-Am team affair added an extra dollop of icing to the cake.

“This is the first time I’ve actually won the tournament with my dad here so it means a lot,” said Hatton as he referenced those earlier wins in 2016 and 2017 that were father free.

“It was a relief to get over the line. The last seven holes were pretty stressful.”

Hatton certainly didn’t do those stress levels any favors when he double-bogeyed the 13th and leaked another on the 14th. “I probably shouldn’t repeat what I said to myself then,” he added with a grin.

Up until that shoogle, Hatton had been making purposeful strides and was three clear after birdies at 10 and 11. Colsearts, meanwhile, had failed to capitalize on decent birdie chances around the turn but Hatton’s mishaps gave him renewed hope.

Spain’s LIV rebel, David Puig, had threatened to gatecrash affairs as he covered his first 10 holes in 8 under to get within striking distance but he slithered away on the run-in.

When Colsaerts birdied the 15th, it was level-pegging but Hatton stood firm and delivered the telling blow on the last as he got his nose over the line in this two-horse race.

It was a sore one for the valiant Colsaerts, who doesn’t have a full category for the tour and was playing on an invitation. “It’s bittersweet,” he said. “If you’d told me earlier in the week that I would finish second, then I would’ve taken it. I’m proud of what I’ve done.”

Having celebrated his dad’s 65th birthday on Saturday night, Rory McIlroy needed a bit more than a session on the range to get in the swing again on the closing Sunday

“A cold shower and a couple of double espressos got me going,” he said with a weary smile after a closing 4-under 68 left World No. 3 with a 14-under tally.

McIlroy has certainly enjoyed the last few weeks back on this side of the pond. The Irish Open and the BMW PGA Championship were terrific, late-season showpieces while a whirl around the Old Course, Kingsbarns and Carnoustie over the last four days is always an experience to savor.

“I’ve absolutely loved them,” said McIlroy, who still leads the Race to Dubai and is eager to top the rankings for a sixth time.

“I appreciate these events more as I get older. The one thing that I love when I come back here is the tournaments just feel a little more authentic and purer and not as corporate.

“Compared to the three FedEx Cup Playoff events (on the PGA Tour), the crowds at the Irish Open and Wentworth, even here as well, were bigger and the atmosphere was better.”

The DP World Tour marketing lot would be cock-a-hoop hearing that. Not so chipper, however, was Robert MacIntyre after joining McIlroy, and his compatriot, Scott Jamieson, on 14 under.

His closing 70 included another damaging exchange with his old foe, the 17th. His double-bogey there on Saturday was followed by a bogey on it in the final round.

Forget the Road Hole. MacIntyre would be happy if was the end of the road for one of golf’s most iconic par-fours.

“Blow it up,” he grumbled. “I don’t think there are many worse holes in world golf. It needs to be a hole you are able to hit a golf shot into and not one where you just hit it onto the green and try to get up and down.”

Jumbo bird! Nicolas Colsaerts makes an albatross at Kingsbarns during third round of 2024 Alfred Dunhill Links

The rarest of them all.

The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship on the DP World Tour is always one of the best events of the year. Not only is the field loaded, but the world’s best players walk the grounds of The Old Course at St. Andrews, Carnoustie and Kingsbarns alongside family and friends. For example, this week, Rory McIlroy is playing with his dad, Gerry.

Nicolas Colsaerts is going to remember this tournament for a different reason.

During the third round on Saturday, Colsaerts’ second shot into the par-5 16th at Kingsbarns hit the front part of the green before rolling all the way up the backstop behind the pin. His ball lost momentum going up the hill and eventually started making its way back down the hill.

Then the ball found the bottom of the hole.

Albatross! Jumbo bird!

Dunhill Links: Leaderboard

Thanks to a third straight 7-under 65, Colsaerts is alone in second at 21 under, one shot behind leader Tyrrell Hatton.

With big names down the leaderboard, Scotsman David Law, chasing status for 2025, sits a shot back Alfred Dunhill Links

It’s been a season of toil and trouble on the course for Law.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Until the golf writers put the finishing touches to our groundbreaking teleportation pod – we’ve lost the Allen Key and can’t tighten the screws – the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship will always remain something of a guddle.

You can’t, after all, be in two places at one time, let alone three. So, you decide to base yourself at the Old Course in St. Andrews but then something starts brewing at Kingsbarns and you opt to tootle off there before news filters through of a dazzling development at Carnoustie.

By that point, of course, you’re halfway between St. Andrews and Kingsbarns with no chance of getting to Carnoustie and you end up birling about in a flustered fankle like the Keystone Cops on a dodgem ride. How’s that teleportation pod doing again, lads?

2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship
Alex Fitzpatrick putts on the third green during day two of the 2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at Kingsbarns Golf Links. (Luke Walker/Getty Images)

In this here, there and everywhere palaver, at least Scotsman David Law is exactly where he wants to be heading into the weekend’s action.

A tidy five-under 67 for a 13-under aggregate left the Aberdonian in a share of third, just a shot off the lead held by Australia’s Cameron John and Belgium’s former Ryder Cup player, Nicolas Colsaerts.

It’s been a season of toil and trouble on the course for Law. In this game of fine margins, though, the small things can make a big difference.

For a casual observer, a share of 29th in last week’s Spanish Open may not have been a cause to hang out the bunting.

For Law, however, that morale-boosting result has given him the kind of shot in the arm that used to come in a blue envelope from the NHS.

He needs an injection of something, of course. At 141st on the DP World Tour rankings, and with events running out, Law is desperate to pull a big finish out of the bag soon to vault into the safety zone of the top 115.

On home turf this week, it’s a case of so far, so good.

“Tied 29th (in Spain) may not sound like a great week but the way things had been going, it was,” said Law, who has made just nine cuts in 24 events this season.

“It’s an amazing game. Something like that can just kick start you. Flying back from Spain, there was a feeling of optimism and momentum. And that’s something I’ve not felt this year at all.

“When you’re not playing well, you try to do everything perfectly. I’d been travelling a little bit earlier to events and playing more holes in practice.

“But it wasn’t working. So, last week, I pitched up on the Tuesday, played nine holes and that was me. I’ve done the same this week.”

2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship
Owner of Utah Jazz Ryan Smith tees off on the third hole during day two of the 2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at Kingsbarns Golf Links. (Warren Little/Getty Images)

After his 64 at Kingsbarns on Thursday, Law fortified his position in the upper echelons with a bogey-free effort around the Old Course. Starting on the 10th, the 33-year-old reeled off three birdies in a row to get himself up and running.

Hopefully, it’s onwards and upwards.

“I’m not enjoying being where I am at all,” he said of his perilous position on the rankings. “But as much as I’d love to be 115 just now, at least I’m not looking over my shoulder. I’m looking up and that has to be the mindset. Be positive.

“First and foremost, I’m looking to secure my job for next year. The easiest way to do that is win this tournament. Failing that, it’s about finishing as high up as possible. I’m in a great place just now.”

Co-leaders set the pace

Colsaerts and John are both in a pretty good place too. The leading duo’s combined world ranking may be a lowly 1,702 but they’re the No. 1s here in the cradle of the game after 36 holes.

Colsaerts began his second round at Carnoustie with a bogey on the third but roared back with a bag of eight birdies as he posted a best-of-the-day 65 – his second 65 in a row – to surge to the summit.

In his own words, Colsaerts suggested that the early bogey left him “agitated.” He took his frustrations out on the treasured Angus links with a pounding that just about left it nursing a bruise.

“I’m just happy to be here,” said the 41-year-old, who is moving towards more television commentary than competing these days.

John, a winner on the east coast back in 2016 when he landed the Scottish Amateur Open Strokeplay title at Gullane, repaired the damage caused by a double-bogey on the fifth hole of the Old Course with a haul of six-birdies in a four-under 68.

John earned his first pro win in his native Australia this year but this outing in Scotland is just his seventh start on the DP World Tour.

2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship
Actor and comedian Bill Murray throws his club during day two of the 2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 2024 at Kingsbarns Golf Links. (Luke Walker/Getty Images)

“If you’d told me before that I’d be leading, I’d have said you were being a bit far-fetched,” he said with a smile.

Fife’s Connor Syme, who made his debut in the Dunhill Links 10 years ago as an amateur, kept ticking along nicely with a 67 for 10-under but Glasgow’s Scott Jamieson came a cropper at the Road Hole and leaked three shots in a 72 for nine-under.

Rory McIlroy is back on six-under after a 69 at Kingsbarns which included a mighty drive on the 14th which rolled onto the green as Robert MacIntyre was putting.

The Scot was nae happy. A double-bogey on the 18th, in a 72 for 5 under, didn’t do much to lighten the mood.

Ryder Cup 2023: Luke Donald names Nicolas Colsaerts as European vice captain at Marco Simone

The Europeans have selected their third vice captain.

Luke Donald has added more experience to bolster his team room ahead of the 2023 Ryder Cup.

He announced Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts as the European team’s third vice captain on Tuesday, joining Thomas Bjorn and Edoardo Molinari.

“My first reaction when Luke asked me was sheer joy,” Colsaerts said. “Every time I hear the words ‘Ryder Cup,’ it takes me back to the edition I played in, how proud I was to wear the European colors and be part of such an unbelievable event. Of course, Luke was in that team, too, and when we spoke he mentioned how much he has always loved what the Ryder Cup means to me.

“Being a vice captain is a different role to being a player but, nevertheless, my mission in 2023 will be exactly the same as it was in 2012, namely, to make a contribution to the team in any way I can.”

During that 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah, Colsaerts went 1-3-0, his lone win coming in four-ball. He and partner Lee Westwood had eight birdies and an eagle throughout the round and beat Tiger Woods and Steve Stricker on the final hole.

Colsaerts has won three times on the DP World Tour, his latest being the 2019 Open de France. He has played in 436 DP World Tour events.

“Nico has been on my mind for a couple of months now, to be honest,” Donald said. “I played in the team with him in 2012, and you could just see how much it meant to him. He understands what it means to represent the European crest and what it means to be part of the Ryder Cup set-up. When I asked him, he literally had goosebumps – so I am very happy to have him as my third vice captain.”

The 2023 Ryder Cup will be contested at Marco Simone in Rome, Italy, from Sept. 26-Oct. 1, 2023.

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