Martin best in tie hole drama

Miguel Angel Martin beat Welsh rookie David Park at the sixth extra hole of a dramatic playoff to win the Moroccan Open yesterday…

Miguel Angel Martin beat Welsh rookie David Park at the sixth extra hole of a dramatic playoff to win the Moroccan Open yesterday.

After both players finished the tournament on 12 under par, they went into a sudden-death play-off at the 18th hole at Agadir.

Both men bogeyed it, parred it, twice bogeyed it again, and then parred it. But at the sixth time of asking the Spaniard scored a par four to Park's bogey five to take the £58,000 first prize.

Martin had started the morning on eight under par, four shots behind overnight leader Park, who had led from the first round in his debut event on the PGA European Tour.

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By halfway the gap had been narrowed to just one stroke as Martin picked up two birdies on the front nine, while Park dropped back with a bogey.

The big question was whether the nerve of the rookie from the Challenge Tour would hold out, although Park is currently leading the junior circuit. Martin, on the other hand, was the experienced professional in the chasing pack. He is a self-taught player who emerged from the caddie ranks in Madrid. Park pulled away again on the back nine with birdies at the 12th, 13th and 16th, but blew his lead by bogeying the last two holes to finish on level-par 72.

Martin birdied the 10th, 16th and 17th but bogeyed the 12th to shoot a four-under 68, and it was enough to earn a play-off.

The Spaniard has had two victories on the Tour and qualified for the last Ryder Cup at Valderrama in 1997, only to miss the event in controversial circumstances with a wrist injury.

After finishing in 10th place in the Cup table, he was axed by captain Seve Ballesteros because he was unable to prove his fitness.

Martin threatened legal action, and Ballesteros accused him of putting his own interests before those of the team and called him "a little man".

The row was resolved when Martin was invited to Valderrama to appear in the team photographs as a non-playing member of the European team. He was also asked to stay on for the week but declined and went home.

Ireland's Philip Walton shot a final round of four over par 76 to finish well down the field on 291.