Charl Schwartzel
Photograph by: Charl Schwartzel of South Africa reacts after a putt on the first playoff hole on the 18th green to win the Valspar Championship during the final round at Innisbrook Resort Copperhead Course in Palm Harbor, Florida, the US, on Sunday. Picture: GETTY IMAGES/SAM GREENWOOD 

MIAMI — Charl Schwartzel parred the first playoff hole on Sunday to defeat Bill Haas and capture the US PGA Valspar Championship.

Schwartzel won his 15th professional title worldwide, his first since last month’s European Tour Tshwane Open and his first in a US event since he birdied the last four holes at Augusta National to win his first major title five years ago.

Haas was right of a cart path with his tee shot on the first playoff hole, the par-4 18th, and found a bunker with his second shot, while Schwartzel landed his ball in the middle of the green.

Haas blasted out to 25 feet with his third shot, while Schwartzel left his birdie putt two feet short. Haas tapped in for bogey, but Schwartzel tapped in for par and the triumph. Schwartzel made the greatest last-day rally to win in tournament history, one better than the four-stroke comeback of John Senden in the 2014 final round.

Haas and Schwartzel each finished 72 holes at the Innisbrook resort’s Copperhead course on seven-under par 277 after 54-hole leader Haas shot a 72. Schwartzel birdied three of the last six holes in regulation to fire a four-under par 67, the day’s lowest round.

He missed by inches on a 40-foot birdie putt at 18.

"That was a really good round," Schwartzel said. "I think everyone’s goal was just to keep bogeys off the card. You were just surviving. It was just really tough."

Ryan Moore, who parred the last 12 holes, was third on 279m with amateur Lee McCoy, the playing partner of world No1 Jordan Spieth on Sunday, fourth on 280. Spieth, the reigning US Open and Masters champion, faded quickly out of contention. He took a bogey at the second, birdied the par-5 fifth, but made double bogey at the par-3 eighth and a bogey at 11 to doom his title bid, shooting a 73 to share 18th on 284.

McCoy, whose boyhood home was near the first tee, sank a 28-foot birdie at the 12th and a tap-in birdie at the par-5 14th on the way to a 69 to finish on 280, becoming only the fifth top-five amateur finisher in a PGA event since the tour’s last amateur winner, Phil Mickelson in 1991 at Tucson.

Schwartzel sank a 64-foot birdie putt at the par-3 13th — saying, "that was just perfect" — to pull within a stroke, but a tap-in birdie by Haas at 11 boosted the American’s edge and an 11-foot Haas birdie putt at the 12th stretched his lead to three strokes.

But Schwartzel sank a seven-foot birdie putt at the par-5 14th to close within two again, and added a 24-foot birdie putt at the par-3 17th to move within one stroke.

Haas sank a testy nine-foot par putt at the par-3 15th to stay in front, but found a bunker at 16 and missed a 10-foot par putt, falling into a tie with Schwartzel.

AFP