11:17am Monday 24th March 2008
SCOTLAND'S Alastair Forsyth came from five behind to beat South African Hennie Otto at the first hole of a play-off for the Madeira Islands Open.
The 32-year-old from Glasgow, who did not make a single halfway cut in his first five starts of the year, fired a closing 67 to take full advantage of Otto's worst round of the week.
Seeking his first European title - he was not even the holder of a full Tour card entering the tournament - Otto followed three 67s with a level-par 72.
Forsyth, whose one previous victory came after a play-off with Australian Stephen Leaney in Malaysia six years ago, could have taken the first prize of almost £90,000 without the need for sudden-death.
Seven birdies and two bogeys in his first 14 holes put him one ahead, but he bogeyed the short 17th then both he and Otto birdied the 386-yard 18th to tie on the 15-under-par mark of 273, four clear of England's Gary Clark.
For Forsyth it was the fourth time out of four that he had birdied the final hole during the tournament, and he made it five out of five to capture the trophy.
Clark was the other member of the final group and his closing birdie left him third on his own at 11 under. The 36-year-old Londoner's best finish on the circuit earned him £33,693.
Welshman Bradley Dredge, needing to win to move back into the world's top 50 a week before the cut-off for the Masters, finished joint 15th.
That means Dredge probably has to take the Andalucian Open title at Aloha in Spain next Sunday to earn a return trip to Augusta, where he was only three off the lead with a round to play last year.
Forsyth, pipped by Ian Poulter for the Tour's Rookie of the Year award in 2000, had had 23 topten finishes since his first win, but this was the perfect way to put his nightmare start to 2008 behind him. He returned home from events in Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Dubai, India and Malaysia without having picked up a penny.
Forsyth and Otto also clashed in a play-off in the 1996 South African amateur strokeplay championship - and on that occasion went nine extra holes before the Scot won that as well.
A YOUNG father died and his two-year-old son was seriously injured when they were hit by a car fleeing from a theft at a nearby supermarket
FAMILY and friends of a North- East man killed by a single punch have taken to the streets to campaign for a crackdown on crime.
TRIBUTES have been paid to a North- East businessman who spent his life fighting to put the region on the map as an engineering powerhouse.
As the credit crunch starts to bite more and more, families are finding themselves at risk of losing their homes.
A FARMER whose business was crippled by the foot-and-mouth outbreak is to sell part of his land to developers to turn into a holiday complex.
A NEW food quality mark aimed at rewarding food and drink businesses in County Durham for consistently high service has been launched.
A HISTORIAN piecing together the story of a wartime Army camp has received details of how one German army corporal ended up there as a prisoner.
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