Porteous finds himself to win Czech Masters

South African comes from behind to end torrid run on the European Tour in style

Haydn Porteous   poses with the trophy as he celebrates victory after the final round on day four of the  Czech Masters. Photograph: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images
Haydn Porteous poses with the trophy as he celebrates victory after the final round on day four of the Czech Masters. Photograph: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images

South Africa’s Haydn Porteous overturned a two-shot deficit in the final round to win his second European Tour title in the Real Czech Masters.

Porteous carded a closing 69 at Albatross Golf Resort to finish 13 under par and two shots clear of England's Lee Slattery, with Tom Lewis and Sweden's Pontus Widegren a shot further back.

Slattery’s overnight lead was quickly wiped as Porteous birdied the first two holes and after dropping a shot on the fourth, the 23-year-old from Johannebusrg also birdied the seventh and ninth to move back in front.

Both men bogeyed the par-five 10th and Porteous also dropped another shot on the 11th, allowing Slattery to regain the lead with just his second birdie of the day on the 13th.

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However, Porteous immediately hit back to birdie the next and produced a moment of real quality when it mattered the most, firing a superb tee shot to within two feet of the pin on the dangerous 16th.

Slattery had dropped a shot on the 15th after finding a bunker off the tee, but also birdied the 16th to keep up the pressure before making a bogey on the last after pulling his approach left of the green.

Porteous won the Joburg Open in January 2016, but a missed cut in last year’s Czech Masters was the first of 14 early exits in 16 events, prompting a return to his former coach.

“It’s been a really torrid time through the last eight, nine months,” Porteous said. “I’ve really started doing the right things and slowly but surely the golf’s got a little bit better and to get my second European Tour win under the belt feels amazing.

“When you start playing on the European Tour you start to lose yourself, you lose how you got out here in the first place. To then find yourself again is key and I can’t thank my sponsors enough for helping me through thick and thin.

“I’m sure this evening’s not going to be the most professional moment of my life, but there’s nothing wrong with having a bit of a celebration!”

Rory McIlroy’s disappointing season continued on Saturday as the defending champion missed the cut in the Dell Technologies Championship.

McIlroy, whose victory in this tournament after a final round of 65 gave him the springboard to go on and win the overall FedEx Cup title, has not tasted victory since after an injury-plagued season and faces a battle simply to qualify for the season-ending tournament at East Lake after a second round of 74 left him four over par.

That was one shot outside the cut and an early exit saw the four-time major winner drop to 50th in the FedEx Cup standings, with only the top 30 after the BMW Championship on September 17th qualifying for the Tour Championship.