Australian Presnell wins Moonah Classic by one

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Alistair Presnell will use his earnings from the Moonah Classic win to fund the rest of the season playing in America.
Dadswell/Getty Images
Alistair Presnell will use his earnings from the Moonah Classic win to fund the rest of the season playing in America.
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Mar. 1, 2009
By Joe Chemycz, PGA TOUR Staff

VICTORIA, Australia -- Australian Alistair Presnell birdied the final hole Sunday to beat Peter O'Malley by one stroke and win the Moonah Classic, the second stop on the 2009 Nationwide Tour schedule. Presnell, a 29-year-old from nearby Melbourne, posted a 4-under 68 to finish at 9-under 279, one better than O'Malley, who was in group behind Presnell and missed a 15-foot birdie putt to tie.

Michael Sim (70) made it a 1-2-3 sweep for the Aussies at Moonah Links, while Americans Skip Kendall (70) and Daniel Summerhays (72) shared fourth place with Terry Pilkadaris, (70) and Adam Bland (71).

Third-round leader Miguel Carballo of Argentina stumbled to a 6-over-par 78 and finished tied for 13th. Carballo began the day with a two-shot lead but had his game in reverse. The first- and second-round co-leader wouldn't make a birdie all afternoon until tapping in a short one on the closing par 5.

O'Malley, a 43-year-old veteran of the European and Asian Tours, held the lead for much of the final afternoon. Birdies at Nos. 1, 7, 8 and 10 put him at 10-under and in control, but Presnell refused to fold under the pressure.

Presnell closed to within one of O'Malley with a birdie at No. 12. He salvaged bogey and saved the tournament at No. 16 after driving his tee shot into a bunker. His second shot came out heavy and wound up in another fairway bunker. After pitching out to 40 yards, Presnell's fourth wound up about six feet away. He canned that putt to stay within range of the leader. He followed that up with a spectacular save from well off the green at the par-3 17th, which kept him at 8 under and set the stage for some drama at the 636-yard closing par 5.

By the time Presnell had reached his tee shot in the 18th fairway, O'Malley was three-putting the 17th to lose the lead and drop into a tie.

Presnell pitched his third to within 15 feet and faced that putt for the outright lead.

"I was struggling to get a read on it, but I hit it exactly how I wanted. I just wanted to get the speed right," he said. "When it went in, it was more of a relief than anything. I was glad I glad I didn't have to step over a 3 ½-footer for par."

O'Malley was then forced to can a similar putt to force a playoff.

"I was trying to die it in from the right side," he said. "I probably hit it a little too hard. Tee to green for the first 12 was pretty good. I really didn't do anything wrong. "

The final two groups were too far back to change the results, giving Presnell the winner's check for $108,000 and full membership on the Tour this year and next.

"These four weeks were about it for me," said Presnell, who tied for 52nd at the Johnnie Walker Classic last week. "If I couldn't get anything done to make enough for another trip over to the States, I might have had to call my old boss and see if I could get my old job back as an air conditioning apprentice."

Presnell and two friends toured the States last summer, trying his hand at four Monday Qualifiers for the Nationwide Tour. He failed to make the field in any of the four.

"Last year, we spent a month in a van," said Presnell of the experience. "I wasn't living the dream, I was chasing it."

Sunday's clutch putt changed all that.

"America is where I'd love to get to," he said. "I'm really looking forward to it. It certainly wasn't on the plans at the start of the year. The money is great, but the win opens a big door for me."

Kendall opened with a 77 on Thursday and then rallied over the final 54 holes, posting a 10-under 206 for the last three days. The Wisconsin native tallied a pair of eagles during Friday's second round and made the cut on the number at even par. The two eagles marked the first time in Kendall's career that he had two in a single day.

"I'm not the biggest of hitters," he said. "I'm usually not the guy making eagles."

Weekend scores of 69 and then 70 vaulted him to a tie for fourth with Summerhays as the top American finishers.

"It was one of those days that I didn't play that poorly," said Kendall, who suffered through a triple bogey on the par-3 fifth Thursday despite hitting the green with his tee shot. "I putted it off the green. Then back on. Then the ball moved about four or five inches and that cost me a penalty. Naturally, I didn't make the putt. I just didn't handle it well and made a couple bogeys after that. I didn't feel like I was playing poorly; it just happened. All of a sudden, you're 5 over. This is the kind of course that may tend to lead to a score like that without playing poorly."

Kendall hung tough the rest of the way and slowly inched his way up the leaderboard for his best finish since a tie for third at the Cox Classic in Omaha last August.

Fourth-Round Notes: The final-round scoring average was 73.486. The scoring average for the week was 72.928.

The Nationwide Tour moves to New Zealand for the next two weeks, starting with the HSBC New Zealand PGA Championship at the Clearwater Resort in Christchurch. This will be the eighth year that the Tour has visited the Clearwater course, where Peter O'Malley won in 2002 and 2005. David Smail, who tied for eighth this week, was runner-up to Darren Stiles at Clearwater in 2008.

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