Shiv Kapur failed to nail any of the birdie putts that came his way but the Indian golfer still managed to turn in an even par 72 that saw him finish tied 16th place at the USD 7 million CIMB Classic, an event jointly sanctioned by Asian and PGA Tours, here today.
Kapur had birdies on third and 17th and dropped bogeys on sixth and 15th and finished with a total of six-under 282 to stay at overnight 16th place.
Other Indians in fray, Gaganjeet Bhullar (73) and Anirban Lahiri (68) finished tied 33rd and 35th.
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At the top, the tussle between Americans -- Ryan Moore and Gary Woodland stayed unresolved and the duo will return tomorrow morning for a sudden-death play-off to determine the champion. Both were tied on 14-under 274 in a weather-hit final round today.
Kapur played consistently over four rounds to take home a cheque of USD 112,000, that should see him rise into top-10 from his current 14th place.
Kapur reckons that he is coming closer to winning his second Asian Tour title since 2005 after staying patient despite making some mental errors this week.
"I can be patient when I need to be and I need to be patient. I think in the past, I've gotten impatient and sort of let things slip when things are not going well. This week I fought back hard, four-over after my first five holes and six-under for the week. That's one big lesson that I learn," said Kapur.
"I wanted to get to double digits under-par but conditions were tough. I just didn't get the putts to fall. I think if you hole a couple of putts early in the round it is a different story. You get to minus two or three under and then you're looking to press on.
"For me I made a lot of pars today, didn't really make too many mistakes and just didn't hole enough birdie putts to really threaten, but I think I played steady the whole week. I take a lot of positives out of the week, a respectable finish," he said.