Kapur drops to 11th, Jeev 26th in KLM Open
September 13th, 2010 - 1:11 am ICT by IANSHilversum (The Netherlands), Sep 12 (IANS) Shiv Kapur and Jeev Milkha Singh faltered on the final day Sunday and ended way down tied 11th and tied 26th as Martin Kaymer won the KLM Open with a ruthless display of precision golf.
Kaymer, who was playing his first event since winning the US PGA Championship, totalled 14 under par for the week as he won by four strokes.
Kapur, who was in contention even after three rounds, shot a one-over 71, as did Jeev and dropped down. Jeev had been in the top five on the first two days.
Kapur had four bogeys and three birdies, while Jeev had two bogeys and one birdie on the final day.
After birdieing the last two holes of his third round to lead by one, Kaymer quickly extended the lead over playing partners Fabrizio Zanotti and Christian Nilsson to three.
Paraguayan Zanotti and Swede Nilsson both dropped a shot at the first, and when the 25 year old birdied the second, Kaymer began to dominate the proceedings.
An unerring display of accuracy saw him make 17 greens in regulation - his display leaving the rest of the field needing something special to mount a challenge that never seriously materialised.
Zanotti and Nilsson shared second on 10-under, while Open Championship winner Louis Oosthuizen, who made the cut on the mark, moved through the field with a 65 to join David Horsey, Jose Manuel Lara and Gonzalo Fernandez-Castaño to share the fourth on
nine-under.
Kaymer’s triumph was the fifth victory in a row by a member of Europe’s Ryder Cup Team.
Kaymer’s second successive victory takes him almost euros 500,000 clear of Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell - Europe’s other current major champion - at the top of The Race to Dubai.
He also joins another cup teammate, Miguel Angel Jiménez, as a three-time winner this season.
Kaymer’s triumph at Whistling Straits last month started the amazing run of success by Colin Montgomerie’s men.
Peter Hanson won a week later at the Czech Open, then Edoardo Molinari in the Johnnie Walker Championship and Jiménez last week at the Omega European Masters.
Kaymer’s only mistake on the final day was a bogey at the short tenth, but he had gone to the turn at 33 to be three clear and a birdie two holes later widened the gap again.
Zanotti and Nilsson produced performances that will ensure they keep their European Tour cards for the next season, having gone into the event precariously placed on The Race to Dubai.
Francesco Molinari and Ross Fisher were the other two Ryder Cup players in the field and they finished eighth and 11th respectively.
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- Jeev 49th, Edoardo Molinari wins Scottish Open - Jul 12, 2010
- Kapur lying second at KLM Open, Jeev fifth - Sep 10, 2010
- Poor finish cost Jeev, Kapur dearly at Abu Dhabi golf - Jan 24, 2010
- Gangjee tied 5th in Singapore Open golf, Jeev shares 9th place - Nov 10, 2011
- Kapur best Indian at tied 13th, Manassero wins Malaysian Open - Apr 17, 2011
- Shiv Kapur leads field in Czech Open - Aug 20, 2010
- Jeev laments poor putting at Omega European Masters - Sep 03, 2010
- Top-10 finish for Jeev at Volvo China Open - Apr 24, 2011
- Jeev improves to tied second at Volvo China Open - Apr 22, 2011
- Randhawa tied fourth at French Open golf - Jul 04, 2010
- Jeev, Kapur drop shots at the end - Jan 23, 2010
- Indian pair Jeev, Shiv tied third in Morocco golf - Apr 02, 2011
Tags: bogeys, championship winner, colin montgomerie, david horsey, fifth victory, gonzalo fernandez, graeme mcdowell, jeev milkha singh, jose manuel lara, klm, louis oosthuizen, paraguayan, peter hanson, pga championship, playing partners, ryder cup, ryder cup team, us pga championship, whistling straits, zanotti