Lahiri fails to find momentum on final day, finishes 41st

Indian golfer Anirban Lahiri never got the momentum going on the final day and slipped to a disappointing T-41 at the Wells Fargo Championships in North Carolina

By :  migrator
Update: 2016-05-09 07:56 GMT
Anirban Lahiri

Seemingly set for a charge into Top-10, Lahiri began the day at one-under 215, and shot 75 to finish at two-over 290 and into the 40s.

After a series of eight missed cuts going back to February, James Hahn finally came through to win in a play-off against Roberto Castro, as bigger names like Justin Rose (71 and third), Rory McIlroy (66), Phil Mickelson (66) and Rickie Fowler (71) ended in a tie for fourth.

Starting off the first, Lahiri bogeyed the third and sixth to roll backwards. Birdies on seventh and ninth seemed to get him back into Top-25.

Following the turn, when he just couldn't get the putter going missing really small ones, he bogeyed three in a row from 11th. A birdie on 14th was a minor consolation before he bogeyed yet again the 18th hole.

"It was extremely and utterly frustrating to finish poorly from great position time and time again," said a disappointed Lahiri. "When you miss a dozen putts inside six feet, you can't score on a tough golf course."

He added, "My game was excellent. I hit well, but just could not get the putts to fall. I need to get some positivity going into the weekends and that has just not materialized these past few months."

Yet, signing off on a positive note, Lahiri added, "Onwards and upwards, the endeavour continues. I have week off and I will take it as it comes."

After missing eight straight cuts on the PGA Tour, James Hahn made up with a fine come from behind win.

Hahn beat Roberto Castro with a par on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff yesterday to snap the three-month slump and earn his second PGA TOUR title.

"It was going bad for a while," Hahn said. "Just didn't have the confidence, didn't believe in myself. I felt like I was putting in the work but wasn't getting any reward for it. You're playing bad and you're missing cuts and there's nothing funny about that."

Hahn, winner of the 2015 Northern Trust Open at Riviera, said when things got bad he remained motivated by never wanting to lose his PGA TOUR card and having to play on the Web.com Tour.

Hahn picked up the USD 1.3 million prize and an automatic two-year extension on the PGA TOUR.

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