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Marcus Fraser sneaks in to win Maybank Championship

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Highlights from the final round of the Maybank Championship

Marcus Fraser took advantage of Soomin Lee's dramatic late collapse to clinch the inaugural Maybank Championship Malaysia and his first win in almost six years.

Lee led by two approaching the final three holes at Royal Selangor Golf Club in Kuala Lumpur but the South Korean double-bogeyed at the 16th and 18th.

That allowed Fraser to take the title with a flawless three-under-par 68 giving him a two-shot victory.

Final leaderboard

Maybank Championship Malaysia

It is the Australian's third European Tour triumph and his first since lifting the Ballantine's Championship in April 2010, with the 37-year-old revealing he was spurred on to go all the way by his children.

He told the European Tour's official website: "It's unbelievable, six years since my last one. My kids keep saying to me every time I walk out the door, 'Dad, can you bring home a trophy?' And I say, 'I'll try, I'll try'.

"This time I get to take one home and they can take it to school for show and tell, which is going to be pretty cool. That's the main reason I wanted to win."

Marcus Fraser of Australia kisses the Maybank Championship Trophy after his win in Malaysia
Image: Fraser says his children will show the trophy off in school

Lee's round of 73 dropped him back to 13 under par overall and a tie for second place alongside Miguel Tabuena, with the 21-year-old Filipino matching Fraser's closing 68.

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In a share of fourth were France's Julien Quesne and Spain's Jorge Campillo, whose compatriot Pablo Larrazabal finished one shot further back on 11 under par alongside England's Richard Bland.

Soomin Lee of Korea reacts
Image: Soomin Lee saw his lead slip away on the final day

Nathan Holman of Australia settled for eighth, while Peter Uihlein's fantastic round of 66 was enough to lift him into a tie for ninth, with the American finishing alongside India's Rahil Gangjee and Japan's Masahiro Kawamura.

Louis Oosthuizen, the 2010 Open champion, equalled Uihlein's five under par round as he finished in a tie for 12th, while Danny Willett, winner of the Omega Dubai Desert Classic earlier this month, carded a disappointing 75 to finish in a share of 45th.