Lowry falls short as Power enjoys surge at RBC Heritage

Taipei’s Pan burns off Offaly man’s challenge as Waterford native boosts tour card bid

Seamus Power was thrilled to finish tied sixth on nine-under. Photograph: Jared C Tilton/Getty Images
Seamus Power was thrilled to finish tied sixth on nine-under. Photograph: Jared C Tilton/Getty Images

Chinese Taipei’s CT Pan clinched a dream victory as Shane Lowry finished tied third and Seamus Power took a big step towards retaining his PGA Tour card with a top-10 finish in the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head.

Just a shot behind world number one Dustin Johnson starting the day, Lowry closed with a one-under 70 to finish tied with Patrick Cantlay and Scott Piercy on 10-under par.

He ended up two shots behind 27-year-old Pan, who shot a four-under 67 to win his maiden PGA Tour title by one stroke from Matt Kuchar, who shot 67, on 12-under par.

Shane Lowry had to settle for his first top-10 finish since his Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship win in January.    Photograph: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images
Shane Lowry had to settle for his first top-10 finish since his Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship win in January. Photograph: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

After briefly moving two shots clear after birdies at the second, fifth and sixth, Lowry was shocked to miss a three-footer for par at the ninth before a double bogey six at the 12th, where he took four to get down from 35 yards left of the green, all but scuppered his title chances.

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He fought back with a birdie from 30 feet at the par-three 14th but had to settle for his first top-10 finish since his Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship win in January.

Overnight leader Johnson slipped to a disappointing 77, dropping seven shots in a nightmare five-hole stretch from the 11th to finish tied 28th on four-under with Ian Poulter tied 10th after a 73.

Thrilled

As for Power, who was ranked a lowly 189th in the FedExCup standings after missing 11 of his first 15 cuts this season, the 32-year-old from West Waterford was thrilled to closed with a four-under 67 and finish tied sixth on nine-under.

“I didn’t make to many mistakes and my short game was pretty good all week,” said Power, who cliched his first individual top-10 finished for 13 months and was projected to move up to 141st in the FedExCup standings with the top 125 at the end of the season keeping their cards.

“I made one bogey on one of the easier holes, which was disappointing but overall it was a tricky day so I can’t complain too much.”

Out in one-under par after following birdies at the second and fifth with a bogey at the ninth, he birdied the 13th and 15th before making a 60 footer for his fifth birdie of the day at the 16th.

“I can take a lot from this,” said Power, who missed seven cuts in a row either side of Christmas. “The last four or five tournaments have been much, much better. I started to find something at The Players (tied 35th) and it’s been encouraging.

“A week like this is great. It gets me kickstarted. I’m obviously not where I want to be but it’s a step in the right direction.”

Graeme McDowell, the 2013 champion at Harbour Town Golf Links, had an expensive finish when he three-putted the 18th from just 12 feet for a double-bogey six and signed for a two-over 73 that left him joint 48th on one-over par.