DAVAO City—Fidel Concepcion finally turned years of promise into fulfillment, capturing his first-ever Philippine Golf Tour crown in the ICTSI Apo Golf Classic here Friday – but not before enduring one of the toughest, most nerve-wracking finishes imaginable.
What looked like a walk in the park quickly turned into a test of will and composure. Concepcion, who had built a commanding six-stroke lead midway through the final round of the P3.5 million championship, suddenly saw his advantage vanish. Yet when it mattered most, the Fil-Australian held his nerve, burying a career-defining birdie from 10 feet on the second playoff hole to edge Korea’s Jaehyun Jung and capture the long-elusive victory.
“Honestly, it’s unreal,” said Concepcion, visibly emotional as he struggled to find the right words. “It’s one of those things you never know if it will ever happen. And somehow – it did.”
He made it happen.
For over a decade, Concepcion has lived with the label of “potential waiting to blossom.” Near-misses, heartbreaking finishes and fleeting moments of brilliance marked his 12-year campaign. This win wasn’t merely a trophy – it was vindication.
Squandering a six-shot cushion would have broken lesser men. But Concepcion, now more seasoned and self-assured, proved that championships are won not by raw talent alone, but by patience, poise and perseverance.
Outdriven by Jung in both playoff holes, Concepcion showed that accuracy and mental toughness outweigh pure power. On their second trip to the par-4 ninth, he calmly pulled a 4-iron from the tee and found the heart of the fairway – a perfect setup for his trusted 8-iron. From 160 yards downwind, he knocked it stiff, landing just 10 feet from the cup.
Jung, forced to respond, came up short, his approach stopping well shy of the flag. The Korean missed his long birdie attempt, and Concepcion seized the moment – rolling in the winning putt and raising both arms in triumph, as years of frustration finally melted into joy.
The path to the playoff was anything but smooth. After birdies on Nos. 1 and 3, Concepcion appeared in total control at two-under through seven, six shots clear of Tony Lascuna. But the Apo Golf and Country Club layout is unforgiving. A double bogey on the par-4 eighth and another dropped shot on No. 10 cracked the door open for the field.
“There were a lot of ups and downs,” recalled Concepcion. “I was two-under early on but lost a bit of momentum and that sort of brought the field back in. The backnine was a roller-coaster, so if there’s one highlight for me, it would definitely be that final putt.”
Jung, five shots adrift entering the final round, played fearlessly. He scorched the back nine with three birdies in the last four holes, posting a tournament-best 67 to catch Concepcion, who matched par 72, at 284. Lascuna stayed close for a while but eventually settled for third at 288 after a closing 72.
Guido van der Valk shot a 71 for fourth at 289 and Elee Bisera birdied the last hole to save a 74 for fifth at 291.
Zanieboy Gialon faltered with a 75 for sixth at 292, Salvador limped with a 78 for seventh at 293, and Dino Villanueva and Korean Chon Koo Kang tied at eight at 294 after matching 71s.
For Concepcion, this breakthrough victory means far more than the ₱630,000 champion’s purse. It’s a symbol of endurance – of countless early mornings, missed cuts and lessons learned the hard way.
“I really didn’t know I had a six-shot lead,” he said. “I just kept playing my game, focusing on hitting solid shots. But it’s really hard to avoid mistakes on this course.”
After 12 years of searching for answers, he finally found them – not through perfection, but through resilience.
Now a certified PGT champion, Concepcion no longer walks as a journeyman chasing form, but as a player reborn – one who has proven that the road to victory sometimes runs through the storm.







