Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted December 1 Diamond Member Share Posted December 1 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ********* Ryggs Johnston survived tough Sunday conditions to win the *********** Open Ryggs Johnston arrived in Australia ranked 954th in the world five months into his professional career having never set foot on Kingston Heath, not even for a practice round But the 24-year-old will arrive home in Montana with an almighty rankings bump and nearly $300,000 richer after surviving everything the Melbourne sandbelt could throw at him, including squally rain,whipping Sunday winds and a raft of challengers to secure a three-shot win in the *********** Open. Johnston, who played his first professional event in June after a hugely successful college career with Arizona State, and whose only previous link to Australia was being named after a movie character played by an ***********, joined names like Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus as the 11th ********* to win the 120-year-old event. He finished at 18-under having turned up “pretty tired” and with no expectations, with his name among some of the best to ever play. It was a win for Johnston’s resilience. As challengers, and the rain, came and went, including former world No.1 ******** Curtis Luck, who held the outright lead after 12 holes, and LIV star Marc Leishman who loomed large, it was the ********* who stood tall. Amid floundering late fortunes for those around the top of the leaderboard, Johnston nailed a crucial birdie putt on the famous par three 15th to break away from the pack, by a single shot. Playing partner and overnight co-leader Lucas Herbert declared on Saturday that Johnston “probably didn’t care” as much the Bendigo boy did about winning his national open. But as Herbert blew up with consecutive birdies on holes 13 and 14, with matching emotional outbursts as the weight of what was slipping away, including a spot at next year’s British Open, hit home, Johnston found himself in front by two with three holes to play. When he teed it up on 18, he was up by three, and cruising. Camera IconLucas Herbert had a day to forget at Kingston Heath NewsWire / Blair Jackson Credit: News Corp Australia Luck, who lost his playing status in the US this season after battling a shoulder injury, bogeyed his final two holes, having flirted with winning, to finish in outright second. The 28-year-old, who has struggled to reach heights expected after winning the 2016 US ******** championship, an event won by the likes of Tiger Woods, three times, could console himself with securing a birth in the 2025 British Open. That will also be the reward for Leishman, who last played a major championship in 2022, before his move to LIV, after he finished. For Herbert, whoever, local knowledge proved little help as he made mistake after mistake, missing fairways and greens regular in his ugly ttwo-over 74, which left him in touright fifht, and not back in the majors. While they didn’t get over the line, Australia’;s last two winners of the Asia Pacific Amatuer Championship, Jasper Stubbs and Harrison Crowe, who both played the Masters before turning pro, finished tied for third and sixth respectively, evidence of how strong Australia’s production line of talent is. For Ryggs, the victory was his first as a DP World Tour member, having already secured his full playing status through qualifying school, having played most of 2024 on the PGA Tour of Americas, the third rung circuit he was playing in 2024. He will also tee it up in the British open at Royal Port Rush, regardless of what happens to his career from here. LEADERBOARD 18-under Ryggs Johnston 16-under Curtis Luck 14-under Jasper Stubbs, Marc Leishman 13-under Lucas Herbert This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #********* #Ryggs #Johnston #survived #tough #Sunday #conditions #win #*********** #Open This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/178710-american-ryggs-johnston-survived-tough-sunday-conditions-to-win-the-australian-open/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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