Henrik Stenson beats Phil Mickelson to win 2016 The Open Championship
(
BBC Sport)
The Open 2016 final leaderboard
-20 H Stenson (Swe); -17 P Mickelson (US); -6 JB
Holmes (US); -5 S Stricker (US); -4 R McIlroy (NI), T
Hatton (Eng), S
Garcia (Spa)
Selected others: -3 A
Johnston (Eng); -2 D
Johnson; -1 M
Southgate (Eng), A
Sullivan (Eng), Z Johnson (Eng); +1 L
Westwood (Eng), J
Rose (Eng); +2 J Spieth (
US); +4 B
Watson (
US); +7 D Willett (Eng)
Full leaderboard
Henrik Stenson carded a joint record eight-under-par 63 to win The Open by three shots after an enthralling final-round tussle with
Phil Mickelson.
The
Swede, 40, birdied four of his final five holes to win his first major with an
Open Championship record score of 20 under par at
Royal Troon.
Mickelson, 46, had an eagle and four birdies in a 65, while fellow
American JB Holmes (69) was third on six under.
Rory McIlroy (67) and
England's Tyrrell Hatton (68) tied fifth on four under.
They finished on the same mark as
Spain's
Sergio Garcia (69), and one behind American
Steve Stricker (69).
Like McIlroy,
Jordan Spieth saved his best round of the week for Sunday, the American's 68 lifting him to two over.
'This was golf, but not as we know it' - Stenson produces round for the ages
Relive the drama and watch highlights of Stenson's victory
Crowd favourite
Andrew '
Beef' Johnston birdied three of his first four holes to get to seven under before the 27-year-old
Londoner faded to a two-over 73 and eighth on three under.
Defending champion
Zach Johnson (71) ended one under, alongside
English duo
Andy Sullivan and
Matt Southgate, the
Essex golfer who conquered testicular cancer.
England's
Masters champion
Danny Willett closed with a level-par 71 for seven over.
Record-breaking Stenson
His 20-under total eclipsed
Tiger Woods' 19-under-par record total in winning The Open at
St Andrews in
2000.
It also equals
Jason Day's record in a major, which the
Australian world number one set at the
2015 US PGA Championship.
The world number six's 63 also beats two-time
Open champion
Greg Norman's 64 at
Royal St George's in
1993 as the lowest final round by a champion, while his aggregate score of 264 beat the
Australian's four-round total of 267, set the same year.
His 63 equals the lowest ever to win a major, emulating
Johnny Miller's score to win the
1973 US Open at
Oakmont.
Stenson becomes the fourth man over 40 to win the
Claret Jug in the last six years - following
Northern Ireland's
Darren Clarke (
Sandwich,
2011),
Ernie Els (Lytham,
2012) and Mickelson (
Muirfield,
2013).
"I had to play at my best to get it over the finish line," he said. "I lost a dear friend on Wednesday morning in the
United States from cancer and I feel like he has been with me all week,
Mike this one is for you."
The 'duel of the
Sons'
The pairing of Stenson and Mickelson over the final 36 holes drew an obvious comparison with the
1977 Open on this same stretch of
Ayrshire coast, when
Tom Watson and
Jack Nicklaus fought their famous '
Duel in the Sun' over a red-hot two days at neighbouring
Turnberry.
Stenson finished runner-up to Mickelson at the 2013 Open at Muirfield.
At Royal Troon, Stenson began the day a shot ahead on 12 under, only to lose the lead by the end of the first
hole, as he bogeyed and Mickelson birdied.
Stenson responded by knocking in five birdies in his next seven holes to edge one clear of Mickelson who managed one birdie and eagle.
They were level again when Stenson bogeyed the 11th but he was back in front with a birdie on the
14th and went two clear for first time when he rolled in a 45-foot putt across the 15th green.
A third successive birdie on the
16th was matched by Mickelson and the American then rolled in an excellent par-saving putt on the 17th to stay two adrift going down the last.
But the five-time major winner left his approach to the
18th 30 feet short of the cup while Stenson fired to 15 feet and rolled in to match the 63 Mickelson opened with on Thursday.
Unlucky Mickelson
The left-hander, who finished third the last time The Open was staged at Royal Troon in 2004, dropped just four shots in his four rounds and his 17-under total would have have won
140 of the previous
144 Championships.
"I played well enough to win by a number of strokes and got beat," said Mickelson who has now finished runner-up in a major on 11 occasions.
"
It's disappointing to come in second, but I'm happy for Henrik. He's really a great champion."
McIlroy and Spieth save best for last
World number four McIlroy started his final-day charge with a birdie at the second - and picked up three more, at the fifth, sixth and ninth holes.
But a wayward drive down the right, which lead to a hack out of gorse, at the hardest hole of the week, the 11th, brought him his first bogey and another followed at the 12th.
Birdies at the
13th and 17th holes saw him get back to four under.