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BACOLOD CITY — Juvic Pagunsan ran roughshod over
Malaysian Siva Chandhran, 6 and 5, in the 36-hole final to
at last win the Philippine Amateur Golf Championship at
the Negros Occidental Golf and Country Club course here.
Pagunsan took his fourth title for the year, but it was
the one missing jewel in a fabled amateur golf career that
will end soon.
The 27-year-old came out for the final 18 holes with
guns ablaze, overwhelming the Malaysian No. 2 with a
brilliant all-around game that turned an all-square match
from the 19th hole into a rout.
“I’ve won a lot of tournaments, but this is the
sweetest,” the R.P. No. 1 said after eight fruitless years
in this event. “It’s made even more sweeter here in
Bacolod, my hometown.”
Pagunsan had won the Malaysian and Thailand Amateurs
and the DHL Amateurs earlier in the year. He came into
this tournament fully prepared, knowing this is his final
shot with thoughts of turning pro early next year.
“I played well today. I prepared for this,” Pagunsan
said. “This tournament completes my grand slam of sorts.”
Pagunsan zoomed to a 6-up lead in a span of 11 holes
from No. 2 in the afternoon, gunning down birdies with
impunity and playing almost perfectly, which put the
Malaysian national coach in awe.
“He [Pagunsan] was very hot, there was no way anyone
could have beaten him today,” said Andrew Argus. “Juvic
was a cut above the rest of the field.”
Chandhran was actually bidding to become the first
foreigner to win this event after Andrew Drage, a
countryman of Argus, ruled it in 1969 at the Valley Golf
Club.
Meanwhile, Mario Labajo, a former caddy at the
nine-hole Matina layout in Davao and one of three entries
of the National Caddies’ Open program, won third place
after a 3 and 2 victory over JR Tanpinco.
Labajo broke out hard and built a 3-up lead right after
the first nine to establish control and win second
runner-up honors in the event backed by ICTSI, San Miguel
Corp., Petron Blaze, the Department of Tourism, PCSO,
Aboitiz Group, Hanjin and PAL, and organized by the
National Golf Association of the Philippines.
Chandhran held a 3-up lead after the first five holes,
when Pagunsan sprayed his drive on No. 2 out of bounds and
missed the green on the par-3 third hole.
But Pagunsan quickly went 2-up after birdies on the
15th and 16th holes. The Malaysian squared the match
heading into the afternoon with two clutch shots on the
par-5 18th.
After pulling his second shot so bad he almost hit the
first tee, Siva hit a lovely lob over a huge tree, landing
the ball to within 20 feet for an uphill putt, which he
made for birdie. |