Friday, April 19, 2024

Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnrat and Anirban Lahiri of India finished tied 11th at the Bermuda Championship, five shots behind winner Brian Gay.

Kiradech Aphibarnrat of Thailand plays his shot from the tenth tee during the final round of the Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

A final round 3-under 68, which included four birdies and a lone bogey at Port Royal Golf Course, ensured Kiradech his best result in a year with his 10-under 274 total while Lahiri maintained his resurgence in form with a closing 67 which moved him up to 31st position in the latest FedExCup rankings.

The 48-year-old Gay claimed his fifth PGA TOUR victory with a playoff win over Wyndham Clark as he ended a winless streak since 2013. Gay and Clark ended the week on 15-under 269.

Lahiri closed out his week with six birdies against two bogeys on a week where he ranked tied first for most birdies made during the tournament. It also maintained his solid start to the new 2020-21 PGA TOUR Season where he registered two top-40s and a tied sixth finish in three previous starts.

“Happy with the consistency this week. I made too many small errors on and around the greens that added up to hurt me enough. Disappointed not to finish in the top-10,” said the Indian star, who is featuring in his sixth straight PGA TOUR Season.

Starting the final round four off the pace, Lahiri started strongly with birdies on Hole Nos. 2, 4 and 7 but dropped a bogey on nine. He made par over the next five holes before closing with three birdies in his last four holes which included a second bogey of the round on Hole No. 16.

“I feel like the game is getting more rounded with every passing week. The biggest challenge and disappointment is not being able to play events and as of now, I’m not in to any of the remaining events on the Schedule (for this year). I may try to Monday qualify for Sea Island (the RSM Classic in three weeks’ time).”

Kiradech, who played alongside Lahiri in the final round, started the final day three shots back but could not get his game firing on all cylinders to mount a challenge for a maiden PGA TOUR victory. He made birdies on the fourth and seventh holes but a bogey on nine pulled the brakes on his game. The Thai converted a two-feet birdie on 10 and ended his day with a 20-foot birdie conversion on the last.

 

Anirban Lahiri of India plays his shot from the eighth tee during the third round of the Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

“I mean, there’s been a lot of things that have happened. I came to India for the Indian Open and we all know what happened after that. So yeah, I think being away from the game for 70‑something days, I didn’t hit a golf ball, I didn’t have my golf clubs with me. They were at the academy and that was a challenge. It’s probably the longest I’ve been away from my clubs for 20 years, maybe more.

I think that also gives you some perspective. It builds the hunger to come back and motivates you, something that can suffer when you have an extended period of bad golf like I did, so that was one.

Forty‑five days I think I was continuously and we started from the ground up, from the foundation, from the basics from learning how to grip a club all over again and standing over a golf ball. We did everything from the beginning like I’ve done so many times and you just build it up from there brick by brick.

So it’s been a long process. It’s been a very step‑by‑step organized process. I added some mental routines, I’ve added some aspects that were probably missing or some structure that was probably missing. So a lot of things have gone into it.

Since I’ve come back I’ve spent some time with Jim Sieckmann, who’s my short game coach out here. We’ve spent a lot of time on chipping, putting and short game and some of those aspects as well.

Yeah, in a nutshell, to cut a long story short, a lot has changed, a lot has gone into the game and into me, I would say, as a person over the last seven months in every aspect. It’s all about developing as a person, developing as a golfer. Sometimes it’s not so much about doing new things, it’s probably about forgetting the bad habits or eradicating the bad habits that have crept in.

That’s what I’ve done. There’s a lot that’s gone into it and there’s a lot that will keep going into it. It’s been good. Like I said, it’s been a journey. It’s an ongoing journey and hopefully I continue to do the good things and keep removing some of the bad habits.”

 

 

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