Jeongwoo Ham Wins Singapore Open; Gill and Bhullar Top Indians

Korea's Jeongwoo Ham won the Singapore Open wire-to-wire with a final round 68 to finish at 16-under, two shots ahead of Australian Cameron John. Both players earned spots in The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale this summer. Pukhraj Singh Gill and Gaganjeet Bhullar were the best-placed Indians, finishing tied for 26th at 4-under 280. Gill shot a superb 67 in the final round, while Bhullar struggled with a 73 after being in contention earlier.

Key Points: Jeongwoo Ham Singapore Open Champion; Indians Shine

  • Jeongwoo Ham wins Singapore Open by two shots
  • Ham and Cameron John qualify for The Open Championship
  • Pukhraj Singh Gill finishes T-26 after final round 67
  • Gaganjeet Bhullar slips to T-26 with final round 73
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Korea's Jeongwoo Ham runaway champion; Gill and Bhullar best Indians at Singapore Open

Korea's Jeongwoo Ham wins Singapore Open wire-to-wire. Pukhraj Singh Gill and Gaganjeet Bhullar finish as best Indians at T-26 in the International Series event.

"It's one of the biggest paycheques I'll have. I'm glad I made the very most of it. - Pukhraj Singh Gill"

Singapore City, April 26

Korea's Jeongwoo Ham produced a wire-to-wire win on Sunday in the Singapore Open presented by The Business Times after a gripping final day duel on The Serapong at Sentosa Golf Club.

Ham was made to work extremely hard for it, though, by impressive young Australian Cameron John at the US$ 2 million International Series event.

Ham closed with a three-under-par 68 to finish on 16-under and beat John by two shots, as the result secured both of them places in this summer's Open Championship at Royal Birkdale.

Pukhraj Singh Gill (71-70-72-67) and Gaganjeet Bhullar (67-68-72-73) finished as the best placed Indians at Tied-26th with a total score of 4-under 280.

The weather also had a big part to play today, when, after three days of oppressive heat and humidity, the skies darkened and at 11:47 am play was stopped for just over three and a half hours due to lightning, and then resumed at 3:30 pm.

Young Gill, who received an invite from The International Series to play this week following its partnership with IGPL, played some great golf today, jumping from his Tied-45 overnight to finish at T-26.

"It's one of the biggest paycheques I'll have. This was my first International Series event. I think it was a great gesture for them to give me the sponsor's invite this week. I'm glad I made the very most of it", he said.

Displaying great skills, he negotiated the challenging Sentosa Golf Club beautifully today with his 67 on the final round. "Feels unbelievable, you know. The biggest thing is that it's very assuring for me now about all the work I've put in over the years and the quality that I hold as a golfer. Obviously, the quality of golf is as high as it can get on the Asian Tour."

Starting from the 10th tee, he birdied the 11th, 14th and 18th holes to go with a lone bogey on the par-4 16th. After the turn, he gained two more strokes in his back nine at the 4th and 7th holes. Talking about his round today, Gill said, "I feel that the setup today was a little more inviting for me.

They set up the course a little longer today. And because I am great off the tee with my driver and I have quite a bit of length, I was able to take very good advantage of that. I think I've birdied all the power 5s today."

On the other hand, Bhullar played a rather patchy round of 2-over 73 on the final day to slip down the leaderboard. After having finished at T-6 or better on all three previous days, he would have hoped to find the finishing kick today.

That never came, as he could not quite find the measure of the course on the day with four bogeys and a double bogey in his round, although the 11-time Asian Tour winner did finish with a flourish with two birdies in the last two holes.

Ham started the day with a four-shot lead over John, and when the interruption occurred, they had completed seven holes with the Korean three ahead.

On the par-five 18th, Ham sealed the deal when he reached the back of the green in two and two-putted for birdie, while John made par - although he nearly holed his chip from just off the green for a three.

Ham said, "Honestly, I sweat a lot and struggle in the heat, so I just kept thinking: play quickly, get through it, and get back to the hotel as soon as possible.

"Of course, you still need to hit good shots, but because it was so hot, I actually wasn't overthinking the golf too much. That probably helped me stay relaxed. I just wanted to finish quickly, shower, and lie down under the air-conditioning."

Ham becomes the second Korean to win the event. Younghan Song was the first in 2016 when he beat then world number one Jordan Spieth from the United States by one, also on The Serapong.

For John, it was yet another fine performance by one of Australia's rising stars. He finished second on the 2025/26 Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit, thanks to three wins, while today marks his finest overseas performance.

Missing out on the title was made up for by getting into The Open.

"It's an unbelievable feeling," said the 23-year-old. I've wanted to play in Major championships my whole life. I came back home in Australia, so to come over here and get it done means a lot. It's something I'll never forget."

The other Indian to make the cut, Karandeep Kochhar, shot a 5-over 76 today to finish 70th with an overall score of 11-over 295.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit K
Great to see Pukhraj Singh Gill and Gaganjeet Bhullar finishing as best Indians! 🇮🇳 Especially impressed with Gill's 67 on the final day—that's some clutch golf under pressure. And Bhullar, despite the slip, showed his class with those last two birdies. Korea's Jeongwoo Ham was just too good though, wire-to-wire is no joke. India's golf future looks bright with these young guns!
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Kavya N
That quote from Gill about the sponsor's invite being a "great gesture" really hit me. It's not easy for young players to get these opportunities, and he fully grabbed it! Jumping from T-45 to T-26 in one round shows real grit. And he's right—the Asian Tour quality is world-class now. Hope IGPL continues this partnership.
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James A
Look, I'm happy for Gill and Bhullar, but can we be honest? Playing well on the final day is good, but finishing T-26 in a field that's not exactly stacked with global superstars (except the winner) isn't something to celebrate too much. India needs to consistently break into top-10s in these events. The talent is there, but the killer instinct still seems missing when it matters most.
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Priya S
Love how Ham just wanted to "finish quickly, shower, and lie down under the air-conditioning" 😂 That's the most relatable thing I've heard from a pro golfer! In Singapore's humidity, I don't blame him one bit. But seriously, well played to all the Indians—Gill's power game on those par-5s sounds like a real weapon. Chalo, next time top-10!
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Sarah B
Three and a half hours of lightning delay? That's brutal for players trying to maintain rhythm. But kudos to the organizers and the Korean winner for

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