Thursday, September 19, 2024

LIV Golf star snatches qualification for The Open as agony turns to ecstasy

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Abraham Ancer led the Open Championship qualifier at halfway but a costly back nine in his second round saw him looking like missing out before he won a playoff

Abraham Ancer came through a playoff to qualify for The Open(Luke Walker/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

Abraham Ancer was on the brink of snapping his putter in frustration, convinced he’d blown his chance at a coveted spot in the Open Championship at Royal Troon, with the tournament just two weeks away.

But in a dramatic twist, the LIV Golf ace secured his place in Scotland, edging out fellow LIV competitor Anirban Lahiri in a tense three-for-two play-off at the Burnham and Berrow Golf Club in the southwest of England.




The University of Oklahoma legend had set an impressive pace early on during the 36-hole qualifier, firing off a six-under-par 65 to edge ahead of former U. S. Open champ Justin Rose by a single stroke after the first round.

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Despite a solid start to his second round, the 33-year-old’s fortunes took a turn for the worse post-turn, with a bogey at the 12th and a disastrous triple-bogey six at the par-three 14th causing him to tumble down the leaderboard.

Ancer managed to claw back with a birdie at the 15th, yet squandered further opportunities as he closed the round over par, finishing the tournament five-under overall. A crucial par-saving putt on the 18th kept his playoff hopes alive, even as he appeared visibly agitated, poised to snap his putter over his knee.

Speaking to Mirror Sports US shortly after, Ancer was visibly downcast, lamenting that he “shot himself in the foot” and ruing his erratic back nine which he feared had dashed his Open dreams. However, a late-game stumble from Charlie Lindh and a double-bogey disaster from South Africa’s Justin Walters flung open the doors for the Fireballs sensation to claw his way into the playoff.

Mexico’s Abraham Ancer, Sweden’s Lindh, and Anirban Lahiri from Bryson DeChambeau’s Crushers were drawn into a three-for-two playoff to identify the final qualifiers after Justin Rose and Dominic Clemons of Stetson University both finished tied for first place with eight-under-par.

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