Colin Montgomerie survived two late scares and two storm interruptions to pull off his first win for 19 months today.

Just 23 days after he crashed out of the US Open with a second-round 82 - his second worst score ever in a major - the 44-year-old Scot followed up his third place in last week's French Open with victory in the Smurfit Kappa European Open at the K Club near Dublin.

Montgomerie fired a closing 65 to win by one from Swede Niclas Fasth having started the day in joint seventh place four behind.

''This is not an important win - it's a very, very important win,'' he said. ''You wonder if it's ever going to happen, of course you do. You have self-doubts and I'm so glad.

''I'm thrilled with the success. I've never made a winner's speech and said I was unlucky and I was fortunate at the last two today.''

The drama came both with his finish and, almost inevitably, the weather.

The Scot's six-iron tee shots on the final two holes - both par threes because of the saturated fairway on what is usually the 578-yard 18th - were both perilously close to going in the water.

For the second of them Montgomerie, bidding to end the second longest barren spell of his entire career, had to hit his chip with one foot on the rocks, but he got it to five feet and saved par.

Fasth, fourth in the US Open and winner of the BMW International Open in Munich on his last start two weeks ago, birdied the 15th to close the gap to one and then, just after missing an eight-foot birdie attempt to tie on the 17th, play was suspended again.

There had been a 48-minute hold-up earlier in the afternoon and the second one stretched to 82 minutes, the six players still to finish returning at 6.25pm.

Fasth gave himself a 14-foot chance, but it slipped by as well and Montgomerie was safe once Peter Hanson had failed to hole-in-one at the last and Soren Hansen did not birdie the 17th.

What did go Fasth's way was the race for a place in the HSBC World Match at Wentworth in October.

He just pipped Montgomerie for that by finishing second, but Montgomerie will come into the 16-man field if Fasth goes on to qualify through his performances in the majors this season.

Hansen, who lost a one-shot lead on the final day of the French Open last week, was two ahead when he resumed this time, but things tightened up after he followed a birdie at the second with a bogey two holes later.

Fasth and Hanson both moved alongside him and then Montgomerie grabbed a share of top spot too.

After three birdies in the first six he did then three-putt the long seventh for a six, but a chip to three feet on the 551-yard 10th was followed by a 30-footer at the next.

As he bogeyed the 12th off a bad drive, however, Fasth hit a brilliant second to 15 feet on the 10th and, although he narrowly failed with the eagle attempt, the tap-in made him the outright leader when play was first suspended.

That quickly changed on the resumption, however. Montgomerie's first shot back was a 15-foot birdie putt from the fringe of the 15th, while Fasth's was a bad pull left of the green on the short 12th.

The two-stroke swing put Montgomerie ahead and after scrambling his two closing pars he waited in the locker room to see if he had done enough to take the title without a play-off.

Fasth followed his bogey with another at the 13th when he pulled his second shot into the water, but when his pitch to the 15th spun back to four feet it set up a tense climax.

He had just missed an eight-foot birdie chance to tie on the 17th when the sirens sounded again to tell the players to stop because of another storm on the way.

A poor Saturday proved costly for last week's French Open winner Graeme Storm.

A disappointing 74 - he hit four bogeys - was improved on yesterday, as the Hartlepool golfer shot a 67.

Birdies on 10, 11, 12 and 14 lifted him up the leaderboard and secured a prize of around £14,000 to go with the winner's cheque of almost £450,000 picked up seven days previous.

Just like the US Open at Pebble Beach in 1992, Montgomerie had to wait two hours to see if he had done enough. Unlike then, though, he had this time.

It was a close-run thing for the one Open Championship place up for grabs as well, but in the end it went to Swede Pelle Edberg, thanks to the performance of his life.