A clutch putt for double bogey? DP World Tour event ends with wild finish

“I put two in the water and thought ‘Well that’s one way to end the tournament.’”

Have you ever heard of a clutch putt for double bogey?

That was the scenario for Daniel Gavins, who rinsed two balls in the water on the 18th at the DP World Tour’s 2023 Ras Al Khaimah Championship and still managed to come away with the win.

“I thought I had (given the tournament away),” said Gavins. “I put two in the water and thought ‘Well that’s one way to end the tournament.’”

The 31-year-old Englishman held a two-shot lead on the final hole at Al Hamra Golf Club in the United Arab Emirates but found the water twice on his way to the green. Gavins made his eventual 30-foot putt for double-bogey to reach 17 under for the tournament, one shot clear of Alexander Bjork and Zander Lombard, who each had a chance to force a playoff. Bjork was in the group ahead of Gavins but bogeyed the last, while Lombard later missed an eagle putt to force a playoff.

“I’ve been struggling off the tee for the last two weeks and it’s not a very nice tee shot to have, even with a two-shot lead,” Gavins explained after the round. “To be fair, I thought I was holing that for the playoff. I didn’t realize Bjork had made a bogey.”

Gavins, who began the day two shots back, shot a 3-under 69 in the final round that included eight birdies – six over a seven-hole stretch – as well as three bogeys and the what could have been costly double. The win is No. 2 for Gavins on the DP World Tour following his victory at the 2021 ISPS Handa World Invitational.

Next up for the Tour is the Singapore Classic, Feb. 9-12 at Laguna National Golf Resort Club.

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The Milwaukee Bucks released their …

The Milwaukee Bucks released their five-game exhibition schedule on Monday, with the preseason slate beginning on Oct. 1 against Memphis at Fiserv Forum at 7 p.m. Two games against Atlanta on Oct. 6 and Oct. 8 in the United Arab Emirates were announced in mid-July, and it was announced they will tip off at 11 a.m. local time. Games at Chicago (Oct. 11) and at home against Brooklyn (Oct. 12) had been previously released by the Bulls and Nets. Those games will be played at 7 p.m.

European Tour Rookie of the Year race: Robert MacIntyre’s mom knows best

The European Tour might as well hand Robert MacIntyre the Sir Henry Cotton trophy before the final round of the DP World Tour Championship.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The European Tour Rookie of the Year race is for all intents and purposes over. The Tour might as well hand Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre the Sir Henry Cotton trophy before the final round of the $8 million DP World Tour Championship, Dubai instead of waiting until afterwards.

But then MacIntyre’s Mum Carol probably knew all along her son was going to win the rookie title. Dad Dougie? Maybe not.

The 23-year-old’s parents are out in Dubai watching their son in action, but they’re not walking together.

“Mum and dad are staying apart on course because mum is so positive but dad negative,” MacIntyre revealed.

“He always thinks the worst, but that’s just natural with my dad. He’s played sport at the top level. It’s a Scottish thing. My mum is definitely the positive one out of the two.

“I reckon I’m more my mum mind-set wise.”

DP World Tour Championship, DubaiLeaderboard

Just as well, or Kitayama might be cruising to the rookie title.

Kitayama has to play out of his skin in the final round and hope the Scot has a colossal collapse to have any chance of becoming only the third American following Brooks Koepka (2014) and Peter Uihlein (2013) to win the rookie title. The Las Vegas resident will get generous odds in his adopted city on that happening, but he’d be wise not to splash any cash on them.

MacIntyre starts the final round 10 shots ahead of Kitayama after a third round 68 to Kitayama’s 77. All he has to do is finish ahead of the former UNLV player and he’ll become the first Scot since Marc Warren in 2006 to win the rookie title.

The left-hander was six shots better than his second round, when he thought he’d put the rookie title in jeopardy.

“I found something in my long game and mainly my driver,” MacIntyre said. “I could go at it today and knew where it was going. The last two days I had been guiding it when I should have just been pegging it up and giving it a rip.
“Today I wasn’t having to look over my shoulder and watch what was going on with him (Kitayama). Although you are trying not to, it is human that you do.”

MacIntyre doesn’t quite have his mom’s total belief. He’s not counting chickens.

“Not yet,” he said when asked if the rookie race was over. “Once it’s all done, I am sure I will taste a wee beer at the end of it.”

He can probably drink a few cold ones on the way round tomorrow. This race is over.

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