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Manassero wins Malaysian Open, as McIlroy misses chance to force playoff

By PA Sport and Associated Press
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Manassero wins Malaysian Open, as McIlroy misses chance to force playoff

Italian teenager Matteo Manassero shot a 4-under 68 Sunday to earn a one-stroke victory at the Maybank Malaysian Open, upstaging Masters champion Charl Schwartzel and Rory McIlroy.

Manassero had an eagle on the par-5 10th and added two birdies on the back nine to finish at 16-under 272 two days before his 18th birthday.

Gregory Bourdy was second after a 67 that included eight birdies. The Frenchman charged up the leaderboard with four consecutive birdies beginning at the third hole, but he bogeyed the eighth and had a double bogey on No. 11 at Kuala Lumpur Golf & Country Club in the event sanctioned by the European Tour and Asian Tour.

McIlroy had a 69 and was third, two shots back, after a holding the second-round lead as he tried to bounce back from his Masters collapse last Sunday. Schwartzel shot a 70 and finished tied for 11th at 7-under 281.

Martin Kaymer, No. 1 in the world rankings, was eight shots back in a tie for ninth after closing with a 72.

McIlroy had four birdies and a bogey on the first 11 holes, but stumbled with a double bogey on No. 12. However, the Northern Irishman rallied with three more birdies and could have forced a playoff with another birdie on the par-5 18th, but his hopes evaporated when his second shot went too far to the right.

“Obviously at this moment I’m pretty disappointed, but it was a good week,” McIlroy said. “I started out really well and to shoot the scores I did considering the traveling is a pretty good effort. … I’m proud of myself at how I picked myself up from last week and the way I came back on the back nine today.”

Manassero, who became the European Tour’s youngest winner with his victory at last year’s Castello Masters, said it was “just fantastic” to earn another trophy before turning 18.

“It was tough,” he said. “The course is really tight and all the players were doing good and playing well. It’s just not easy to concentrate, especially to stay calm.”

McIlroy, who had to take a nearly 30-hour flight to Malaysia and arrived only a day before the tournament began, looked visibly tired during the final round, despite maintaining his smile for the huge crowd swarming around him. However, his caddy ran out of patience when some spectators ignored the ban on taking photos while players were teeing off and asked officials to confiscate some of the cameras.

Manassero will move up to 35th in the world rankings next week. An eagle on the par-5 10th was the highlight of his final round, with two birdies and one bogey adding to his impressive final-round score.

"It's a great achievement after just 11 months of professional golf," he said. "It's a great achievement for myself and gets me into the majors -- I just missed Augusta but playing the other three will be fantastic."

The Italian believes he has had a great week and is happy with his overall performance.

"I had a really good week from the beginning," he said. "I didn't miss many shots apart from the second round when I didn't play great but I was still able to finish well and get in contention. I had a really good weekend and managed to get the win."

But Manassero also insisted that he now has to start looking ahead to picking up more event wins.

"I'm really proud of that and the next target will be winning another tournament and keeping the momentum going. It's going well and we'll see what happens," he said.

McIlroy, who won his first European Tour event as a 19-year-old, also praised the performance of Manassero.

"Matteo is fantastic. He is a great talent -- to get two wins on the European Tour before your 18th birthday is pretty special," he said. "He is great and we've known he is a great player. He deserves it."