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Saturday, April 27, 2024

Mondilla cops PGTA crown with late surge at Riviera

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SILANG, Cavite—Clyde Mondilla survived a disastrous meltdown and bucked Tom Kim’s fiery charge at the back, banging in a clutch birdie on No. 16 to hack out a two-stroke victory over the Korean amateur and Michael Bibat with a closing 67 in the $100,000 ICTSI Riviera Classic here yesterday.

Mondilla wiped out an overnight two-stroke deficit with a solid five-under 30 start but blew a five-shot lead at the back, enabling Kim to draw level on No. 13 on an eagle-spiked rally. They traded pars in the next two holes before Mondilla birdied the 16th from close range then watched his young rival succumb to pressure, hitting a couple of sloppy wedge shots on the par-5 hole and holing out with a bogey.

That crucial two-shot swing ended what had appeared to be another tight finish reminiscent of Rene Menor’s record six-hole playoff victory over Thai Pasavee Lertvilai at ICTSI Splendido Classic as Mondilla matched Kim’s par-bogey windup to cruise to two-shot romp on a 72-hole total of nine-under 275.

“I’m thankful my driving and putting clicked when I needed them most,” said Mondilla, who banked the top $17,500 purse in this third leg of the inaugural PGT Asia Tour put up by ICTSI and organized by Pilipinas Golf Tournaments Inc.

The victory also erased the stigma of his playoff setback to Jay Bayron here in the ICTSI Philippine Golf Tour leg last year.

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“I really wanted to win this tournament after losing to Jay (Bayron) in sudden death last year. I waited for one year to redeem myself and I’m so happy to have pulled it off,” said Mondilla, who opened his bid here with a solid 65 only to reel back with mediocre 71-72 outputs in tough condition in the middle rounds.

 Clyde Mondilla tips his cap as he acknowledges the cheers from the gallery after claiming the ICTSI Riviera Classic crown of the PGT Asia Tour.

The victory was the Del Monte ace’s third this year, counting his pair of thrilling one-stroke triumphs over Tony Lascuña and Miguel Tabuena at Manila Southwoods and over American Nicolas Paez, Jhonnel Ababa and Lascuña in the Philippine Masters revival at Villamor last May.

Three behind Kim and two off Mondilla at the start of the final round, Bibat pressed his bid with back-to-back birdies from No. 4 but stumbled with a bogey on No. 8. But he birdied two of the last six holes for a 68 and tied Kim, who ended up with an even-par 71, at second at 277s. He took the runner-up purse of $11,500 while Kim claimed the low amateur honors.

Jhonnel Ababa rallied with the day’s best bogey-free five-under 66 and grabbed solo fourth at 281 worth $7,000 while Lascuña finally broke par with a 69 and wrested solo fifth at 283. He took home $5,600.

Dutch Guido Van der Valk hobbled with a 72 and ended up sixth at 284 while Erwin Arcillas placed seventh at 285 after a 71 and Australian DJ Loypur rallied with a 66 to tie American James Bowen (71), Marvin Dumandan (76) and Charles Hong (76) at eighth at 286 in the event backed by Custom Clubmakers, Meralco, Champion, Summit Mineral Water, K&G Golf Apparel, BDO, Sharp, KZG, PLDT and M.Y. Shokai Technology Inc.

Mondilla’s victory likewise underscored the local aces’ domination of the region’s newest circuit after Tabuena nipped Angelo Que and Indonesian Ian Andrew to rule the inaugural leg at Aboitiz Invitational at Southwoods and Menor bucked the odds to claim the Splendido crown.

Though it failed to match last week’s Splendido finish in terms of suspense, Kim still made it one ending of a thriller as the club bet, after squandering a two-stroke lead on Mondilla’s scorching start, fought back from five shots down with an eagle-par-birdie binge from No. 11 to force a tie at nine-under overall as Mondilla bogeyed Nos. 11 and 12.

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