Rickie Fowler puffed his cheeks and shook his head. What looked like being a procession to the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship title ended up being a squeeze for the US golfer on Sunday.
It needed two moments of inspiration in the final round to seal a one-shot victory — and spark more talk about Fowler’s place in golf’s current elite.
Dressed in his trademark Sunday orange, Fowler rebounded from a double-bogey at No. 7, which helped trim his lead over a congested pack of challengers from four strokes to one, by chipping in from 30 yards for eagle from a bunker at No. 8.
Photo: EPA
Then, at No. 17, Fowler holed a chip from just off the green for a birdie that shook off playing partner Thomas Pieters, the Belgian who emerged from the bunch to chase Fowler all the way down the stretch.
“It was not how it was planned, but came out on top,” a smiling Fowler said of the tight finish.
Fowler, who held a two-stroke lead after a third-round 65, carded a three-under 69 for 16-under 272 overall.
Pieters (67) was runner-up, with fast-finishing Rory McIlroy (68) and Henrik Stenson (67) tied for third.
There was satisfaction for Fowler with claiming his fourth win worldwide in nine months, after victories at The Players Championship, the Scottish Open and the Deutsche Bank Championship last year. This win is to move him from No. 6 to No. 4 in the rankings, for a first-ever spot in the world’s top five.
The so-called “Big Three” of Jordan Spieth, Jason Day and McIlroy might need to be enlarged.
“I want to be part of the crew. It would be a pretty good foursome,” Fowler said. “I think I mentioned through the summer at some point, I said I was a sneaky fourth. We’ve got to take care of a major and then maybe I can join the crew.”
The win was extra special for Fowler, considering Spieth (No. 1), McIlroy (No. 3) and Stenson (No. 5) were in the field — arguably the strongest the European Tour will have this year.
Spieth tied for fifth — five shots behind Fowler — after a 68 and acknowledged after his final round that he was “beat up, mentally and physically,” having played in South Korea, China, Australia, the Bahamas, Hawaii and now Abu Dhabi since October last year.
“I’m very tired. I am,” Spieth said. “I’m not 100 percent right.”
The championship went down to the wire. Fowler took a two-shot lead over Pieters down the par-five 18th and found a greenside bunker with his approach. Pieters gave himself a putt for eagle, which he missed left by an inch.
Fowler had two putts to win and he needed them both, with his winning effort from 2 feet.
This is the first time Fowler has won during the first four months of a year. He has made a fashion statement this week by wearing high-top golf shoes and ankle-tight jogger pants, but he has sent out a golfing message, too.
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