Key Points

Alex Noren captured his second BMW PGA Championship title in dramatic fashion. He defeated Adrian Saddier in a playoff at Wentworth Club to claim his 12th DP World Tour victory. The win makes Noren the most successful Swedish golfer in tour history, surpassing Robert Karlsson and Henrik Stenson. Meanwhile, Rory McIlroy finished tied for 20th while Aaron Rai and Patrick Reed shared third place.

Key Points: Alex Noren Wins BMW PGA Championship Playoff Over Adrian Saddier

  • Noren wins second BMW PGA title in playoff against Adrian Saddier
  • Becomes Sweden's most successful golfer on DP World Tour
  • Rory McIlroy finishes tied for 20th position
  • Aaron Rai and Patrick Reed share third place at 16 under par
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Swede Noren wins BMW PGA in a play-off, McIlroy 20th

Alex Noren defeats Adrian Saddier in a playoff to claim his second BMW PGA Championship title at Wentworth, becoming Sweden's most successful DP World Tour golfer.

"Noren making no mistake with his birdie effort to seal the victory - Tournament Report"

Wentworth, September 16

Alex Noren edged aside Adrian Saddier in a play-off to win his second BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth Club. It was his 12th DP World Tour title.

Aaron Rai and Patrick Reed shared third place on 16 under par. At the same time, Ryder Cup trio Matt Fitzpatrick, Tyrrell Hatton and Viktor Hovland, Scotsman Ewen Ferguson, South Africa's Darren Fichardt and Si Woo Kim of South Korea were a shot further back in a share of fifth.

Among other big names, Jon Rahm (66) was T-13 as was Hideki Matsuyama (67), Rory McIlroy (65) was T-20, as was Joaquin Niemann (69). India's Shubhankar Sharma missed the cut earlier on.

Noren, who famously carded a course record-equalling ten under par 62 to win this event in 2017, started the day in a share of the lead with the Frenchman as he sought his second victory in the space of just three weeks after triumphing at the Betfred British Masters 21 days ago.

The 43-year-old held a one-stroke lead after the front nine, but Saddier hit back after the turn as he carded four birdies coming home. Noren birdied the 12th and 13th and the pair matched each other with gains on the 17th as they moved to 19 under with one hole to play.They both made par on the 18th to force a play-off, and on the first extra hole they went blow-for-blow down the left-hand side of the formidable par five. Facing tricky chips, Saddier went over the green and was left with a tricky downhill putt, while Noren hit his attempt to three feet.

Saddier missed his putt on the low side, with Noren making no mistake with his birdie effort to seal the victory and move ahead of Robert Karlsson and Henrik Stenson to become the Swede with the most victories in Tour history.

A grand total of £72,000 was raised for the Golf Foundation, the Official Charity of the BMW PGA Championship, as part of the Eagles for Education initiative. The BMW Group donated £1,000 for every eagle made during the week, with the fourth yielding the most with 25 during the four tournament rounds.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Noren's comeback story is inspiring! 43 years old and still winning against younger players. Shows age is just a number when you have skill and determination 👏
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Arjun K
McIlroy finishing T-20 is surprising. Expected him to be in contention. Maybe he's saving his best for the Ryder Cup next week? 🤔
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Priya S
Love that they raised £72,000 for charity through eagles! Sports events should always have such initiatives. More tournaments should adopt this model ❤️
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Michael C
The playoff sounded intense! Noren's experience really showed on that tricky chip. Saddier will learn from this and come back stronger next time.
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Nikhil C
While the tournament was exciting, I wish the coverage showed more of the Asian players. Matsuyama T-13 and Si Woo Kim T-5 deserve more attention!

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