Thomas Pieters with the Portugal Masters trophy
Thomas Pieters with the Portugal Masters trophy

Thomas Pieters wins Portugal Masters after Matthieu Pavon slips up in pursuit of European Tour title


Thomas Pieters capitalised on two costly mistakes from Matthieu Pavon to win a dramatic renewal of the Portugal Masters.

Leaderboard

-19 Pieters

-17 Pavon, Bjerregaard, N Hojgaard

-13 Jordan, Bertasio

-12 Laporta

Report

Thomas Pieters capitalised on two costly mistakes from Matthieu Pavon to win a dramatic renewal of the Portugal Masters.

Pieters fired a final-round 68 to win by two, getting the better of a protracted duel with Pavon and fending off a charge from Nicolai Hojgaard, who shared second with the Frenchman and Lucas Bjerregaard.

If it sounds like a simple Sunday for a class act who started it as an odds-on favourite, it was anything but as the European Tour threw up more drama.

Pavon, seeking his first professional title, moved two shots clear through 10 holes with four birdies on a blemish-free scorecard as he stood tall under pressure - for a time.

The tournament changed complexion spectacularly at the par-five 12th hole where Pavon twice found water on the way to a triple-bogey eight, as Pieters holed from off the green to move into a two-shot lead of his own.

Pavon drew level again with birdies at the 13th and 15th before Pieters holed an excellent par save at the par-three 16th after missing the green with his tee-shot.

Still tied heading to the 17th, Pavon again came unstuck on a par-five, finding water with his second and running up a bogey. Pieters, who had sent a towering second into the heart of the green, two-putted for birdie and again his lead was two.

There was time for more tension at the final hole as Pavon fired his approach inside 15 feet and Pieters faced a par putt of almost twice that, but the Belgian finally ended matters by holing to seal a two-shot victory.

“It does (feel like a long time),” said an emotional Pieters. “Two years is a long time. I’ve had a child in the meantime, who talks and runs around, it does feel like a long time.

“I was going into this week and next week with my back to the wall. I had nothing to lose but everything to gain.

“I’ve never missed the end of the Race to Dubai and really didn’t want to miss it. I didn’t care if I finished first, second or third. I just wanted to get there, but winning is amazing.”