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Paul Casey wins Porsche European Open after dramatic final day

Englishman shoots bogey-free final round of 66 to win by one stroke in Hamburg

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Paul Casey reflects on a flawless final round in Hamburg to clinch victory in the Porsche European Open

Paul Casey claimed his first European Tour title in five years after coming out on top of a congested leaderboard at the Porsche European Open.

Leaderboard

Porsche European Open

The 42-year-old was joined by Austrian Bernd Wiesberger and overnight leaders Bob MacIntyre and Bernd Ritthammer at 12 under par with three holes remaining during an enthralling finale at Green Eagle Golf Courses in Hamburg.

Casey's experience came to the fore after a stunning birdie putt from 35 feet at the 16th proved to be the turning point as he carded a birdie-birdie-par finish to claim his 14th European Tour victory - his first since the KLM Open in 2014.

"I get emotional at every victory but this year has been so fantastic," said Casey, who dedicated the trophy to former winner Gordon Brand Jnr following his death at the age of 60 last month.

"This is an incredibly prestigious trophy that has a lot of history to it on the European Tour so I'm over the moon.

"I'm happy to be the Porsche European Open champion."

Matthias Schwab
Image: Matthias Schwab shared second spot

Casey started the day one shot behind the Scot and Ritthammer at eight under and recorded his best front nine of the week of 31 to move in contention, with MacIntyre still maintaining the one-shot advantage at the turn.

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The 23-year-old's only blemish at the 12th left the door open for Casey, who replied with a birdie at the 13th, to get his nose in front before moving back ahead at the 16th following a four-way tie for the lead.

Paul Casey is all smiles as he walks off the 18th hole at the Porsche European Open in Hamburg
Image: Casey was all smiles as he walked off the 18th hole

Casey could only par the last to give MacIntyre and Ritthammer hope of a potential play-off.

But the Scot's eagle putt slid by the hole before the home favourite's birdie attempt pulled up just short as the world number 17 became the third successive Englishman to win the event after Jordan Smith and Richard McEvoy.

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