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South African Open: Andy Sullivan takes play-off victory after Charl Schwartzel's final-round collapse

Andy Sullivan South African Open
Image: Andy Sullivan: Clinched maiden European Tour title after a play-off

A final-round collapse from home favourite Charl Schwartzel saw Andrew Sullivan snatch the South African Open title in a dramatic play-off, to claim his first European Tour title.

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England's Andy Sullivan picked up his first tour title victory beating Charl Schwartzel in a playoff to claim the South African Open.

Schwartzel led by five shots going into the final round, but could only manage a two-over-par 74 as his game fell apart on the final five holes.

The former Masters champion bogeyed the 14th and 17th, while three-putting the 16th for a double-bogey six left him tied with Sullivan on 11 under par.

The players returned to the 18th for a sudden-death play-off, with Sullivan producing a stunning recovery shot from the trees before putting the winning birdie from 10 feet.

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Big surprise

Sullivan, who held a one-shot lead at halfway only to struggle to a third round of 74, began the day seven shots off the pace before a birdie on the 10th and an eagle on the 12th moved him 10-under.

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Andy Sullivan shares his delight at claiming his first tour victory, claiming the South African Open via a playoff.

The 28-year-old’s hopes looked over when a long birdie putt on the 18th fell inches short, but Schwartzel’s shaky finish meant that a five under 67 from the Englishman was enough to tie the leaderboard.

Best of the rest 

Sheffield’s Matt Fitzpatrick was the first to close the gap on playing-partner Schwartzel to three when he birdied the second and fourth, only for the 20-year-old to run up a double-bogey six on the seventh.

The former US Amateur champion bounced back with a birdie on the next but dropped another shot on the ninth to lie eight under, before a triple-bogey on the 13th ended his hopes as he eventually finished tied-fifth on seven under.

Lee Slattery carded a closing 69 to finish third, with a bogey on the 18th from Pablo Martin Benavides leaving the Spaniard a further shot back.