Fabrizio Zanotti on Sunday became the first Paraguayan player to win on the European Tour, defeating world No. 2 Henrik Stenson at the fifth extra playoff hole to capture the BMW International Open in Pulheim, Germany.
The 31-year old Asuncion-born player posted a final round 65 to join Sweden’s Stenson (67), Frenchman Gregory Havret (66) and Spain’s Rafa Cabrera-Bello (67) in the playoff in the 2 million euro (US$3 million) event on the Gut Larcenhof course near Cologne.
After Havret dropped out at the second extra hole, the 305th-ranked Zanotti, competing in his 180th Tour event, matched the birdies of Stenson and Cabrera-Bello at the third extra hole when rain began falling heavily.
Photo: EPA
Stenson and Cabrera-Bello were then in rough off the tee at the fourth extra hole, the par-four 18th, with the Spaniard dropping out after finding water guarding the green with his second shot.
Stenson was forced to layup short of the green before then matching Zanotti’s par.
However, Stenson then found the water with his tee shot at the fifth extra hole, the shortened par-four 17th, with Zanotti laying-up with the aim of getting a par.
Zanotti then created European Tour history when Stenson, who found a bunker with his third shot, conceded victory after failing to sink his next shot.
A delighted Zanitti, who lost his playing card last season, but regained it in November last year by finishing second at the Tour School, was doused in champagne ahead of being handed a first-prize check for 333,330 euros.
“I feel very, very happy and it is a moment I’ve been waiting for a long time,” he said. “I have worked hard and I am very happy. I am happy too for my wife, Lucia who was here to see my first win and to my coach, and also to my sports psychologist Patricia Fuentes.”
“This win also will be huge in Paraguay, as everybody is going to be very happy for me. Everyone was expecting a lot from me in Paraguay, so this win is going to be great for Paraguay that only has five golf courses in all the country,” Zanitti said.
Victory also earned him a two-year Tour exemption and a start in next month’s Bridgestone Invitational and next year’s European Tour Volvo Champions.
Stenson’s only comfort is that he has inched closer to world No. 1 Adam Scott and with both players now not competing before the July 17 British Open commences it means Stenson will have another chance of going past the Australian and become the first-ever Swede to top the rankings.
Despite missing out on victory, Cabrera-Bello and fellow Spaniard Pablo Larrazabal, Ireland’s Shane Lowry and South African George Coetzee have qualified for the British Open via a “mini”’ Tour money list concluding in Cologne.
England’s James Heath was also celebrating after being handed the keys to a gleaming 160,000 euros BMW i8 sports coupe after a hole-in-one at the par-three 16th.
It is London golfer’s first Tour hole-in-one and, according to him, 15th in his career, but strangely, just the first time that he has won any prize.
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