Arab Times

Japan’s Matsuyama wins at Riviera with 62

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LOS ANGELES, Feb 19, (AP): Hideki Matsuyama set the Riviera record for the lowest closing round by a winner Sunday in the Genesis Invitation­al, giving the Japanese star another record that means far more to him.

Matsuyama rallied from a six-shot deficit with a 9-under 62, punctuated by consecutiv­e shots inside a foot of the hole, to win for the ninth time in his career on the PGA Tour. That breaks the record for Asian-born players he shared with K.J. Choi of South Korea.

Matsuyama finished at 17-under 267 for a three-shot victory over Will Zalatoris (69) and Luke List (68). Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, best friends playing in the final group, faded in the middle of the back nine and tied for fourth.

It was Matsuyama’s first victory since his playoff win at the Sony Open two years ago, after which Shigeki Maruyama sent him a text to remind him of a conversati­on they once had about becoming the most prolific PGA Tour winner of Asian players.

This one looked unlikely at the start of a final round in which Cantlay had a two-shot lead and looked to be in total control of his game. But it was a struggle from the start for Cantlay, who couldn’t find fairways or greens or make many putts that mattered.

Cantlay missed a 12-foot birdie attempt on the easy par-5 opening hole, and then didn’t have another birdie putt until the sixth hole. He closed with a 72.

Cantlay played with Schauffele, who struggled just as much. Schauffele got back in the mix with a tough birdie on the par-4 10th and holing a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 11th. He bogeyed the next three holes and and rallied at the end for a 70.

List set the early pace. Zalatoris took the lead in the middle of the back nine. At one point there was a five-way tie for the lead heading to the tough stretch on the back nine at Riviera.

And then Matsuyama seized control with sheer brilliance. His approach to the tough 15th carried the bunker and rolled out to 8 inches.

“The second shot on 15 was probably the best shot I had,” he said through his interprete­r.

On the par-3 16th, he let the club dangle as he followed the flight, unsure where it would go until he heard the crowd cheer for a shot that rolled to within 6 inches. He got up-and-down for a third straight birdie on the par-5 17th to stretch his lead to three shots, and by then, no one could catch him.

Matsuyama’s final act was a sharp-breaking 4-footer for par on the final hole, and he clinched his fist - a rare show of emotion by the Japanese star - when it dropped. His 62 broke, by one, the Riviera record for best closing round by a winner set by Doug Tewell in 1986.

Matsuyama had struggled the last two years, starting with a neck and back injury at Bay Hill in March 2022. He had only six top 10s worldwide during that stretch and fell out of the top 50 in the world.

“Ever since that injury, I was worried every week something bad might happen,” Matsuyama said. “This week I had no issue. I played without any worries. That really helped.”

The win was worth $4 million from the $20 million purse and moves him to No. 20 in the world with the entire major season ahead of him. Matsuyama now has 18 wins worldwide, eight on the Japan Golf Tour and the unofficial Hero World Challenge, also hosted by Tiger Woods.

In Naples, Fla. Stephen Ames captured his seventh PGA Tour Champions title Sunday without hitting a shot when the final round of the Chubb Classic was canceled because of a massive storm system moving across Florida.

Tournament officials originally planned to play only nine holes for the final round at Tiburon Golf Club until a forecast of the storm getting stronger led to the cancellati­on.

Ames shot an 8-under 64 on Saturday to build a three-shot lead over Rocco Mediate, and he was declared the winner. Ames now has five wins in his last 24 starts on PGA Tour Champions.

Ames finished at 13-under 131 and earned $270,000. Rocco Mediate, who opened with a 63, was runnerup after a 71 on Saturday. Ernie Els was part of a four-way tie for third.

Steven Alker, who won the last two Champions events dating to the end of last season, wound up in a tie for 15th.

LIV Golf player David Puig of Spain had a 61-61 weekend for a twoshot victory in the IRS Prima Malaysian Open. Puig earned one of three spots in the British Open through the Internatio­nal Finals Qualifying series. The other two spots went to Jeunghun Wang, the runner-up who also closed with a 61, and Denwit Boriboonsu­b, who tied for third . ... Patty Tavatanaki­t closed with a 7-under 65 to cap off a dominant victory in the Aramco Saudi Ladies Internatio­nal on the Ladies European Tour. The former UCLA star and LPGA major champion won by seven shots over Esther Henseleit . ... David Ravetto of France closed with a 69 for a twoshot victory over Sam Hutsby int he Dimension Data Pro-Am, a tournament co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour and Europe’s Challenge Tour. ... Daniel Gayle won the Webex Players Series Hunter Valley on the PGA Tour of Australia by closed with a 4-under 60 for a one-shot victory over amateur Phoenix Campbell, who shot 69. Kazuma Kobori of New Zealand, who already has three wins this year, shot 65 to finish in third place, two shots behind.

 ?? Angeles. (AP) ?? Hideki Matsuyama, of Japan, holds the the Genesis Invitation­al trophy after he won the final round of the Genesis Invitation­al golf tournament at Riviera Country Club, Sunday, Feb. 18, 2024, in the Pacific Palisades area of, Los
Angeles. (AP) Hideki Matsuyama, of Japan, holds the the Genesis Invitation­al trophy after he won the final round of the Genesis Invitation­al golf tournament at Riviera Country Club, Sunday, Feb. 18, 2024, in the Pacific Palisades area of, Los

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