Daniel Chopra
Daniel Chopra of Sweden was declared the winner of the Fresh Express Classic at TPC Stonebrae when heavy fog rolled into Northern California and ultimately forced the cancellation of the final round.
The start of the fourth round was delayed four hours before the fog cleared enough and players were given the green light to start at 1:30 p.m. The day was short-lived as the fog returned and officials suspended play four hours later. The round was cancelled because there was not sufficient time to complete the round on Sunday and the option of Monday play was not available, thus the final tournament standings reverted back to the 54-hole scores.
Nobody had yet to complete the round as the first groups were through 16 holes and the final groups had only played seven.
The 37-year old Chopra had posted a course-record 61 in Saturday's third round to reach 12-under 198, one stroke better than Luke List and Monday qualifier Russell Knox.
The 37-year old Chopra had posted a course-record 61 in Saturday's third round to reach 12-under 198, one stroke better than Luke List and Monday qualifier Russell Knox.
"A win is a win and I feel just as happy as if we would have finished today," said Chopra, who collects his first title since taking the 2008 Mercedes-Benz Championship in a playoff over Steve Stricker to open the PGA TOUR season. "I'm kind of shock, really. All of a sudden the buzzer sounds and I have this (trophy)."
Chopra, a two-time PGA TOUR winner, collected his third Nationwide Tour title and his first since taking the 2004 Henrico County Open. The victory was worth $108,000 and moved him to No. 3 on the money list.
"We were eight minutes away from calling the tournament and suddenly the fog disappeared and we were playing," said Chopra. "For most of the day it looked like we weren't going to play. The hardest thing was the mental uncertainty because I haven't been in this position for a few years."
When fourth-round play began Chopra stumbled with a bogey at No. 2 and eventually relinquished the lead to the 25-year old Knox, a Monday qualifier making only his fourth career start on Tour. Knox took possession of the lead with his birdie at the par-3, 6th hole. Playing with Knox and List, Chopra birdied No. 7 to regain a share of the lead.
"I'm not going to sit on the plane tomorrow and feeling any less happy or any less satisfied because I played well," said the winner. "It wasn't handed back to me. I was still in it and tied for the lead at the buzzer."
Chopra, who missed the cut in his only other start at the Panama Claro Championship, earned the win when he flirted with shooting a 59 in Saturday's third round. He was 10-under par through 16 holes on the par-70 layout and needed only one more birdie on his final two holes to join an elite group of players. His 45-foot birdie putt at No. 17 missed by inches and an errant second shot at No. 18 ultimately led to his only bogey of the day.
Knox, a native of Scotland, was a co-leader after 36 holes and had a chance to tie for the lead but missed a short birdie putt on his final hole. That missed 4-footer turned out to be the difference between a chance at a playoff and a share of second place.
"I'm not sure how things would have turned out today," said the Scottish-born Knox. "I really had no idea. I just tried to play to see how well I could do. I was playing well and thinking that maybe I had a chance to win."
When the fog returned, as it is known to do in the San Francisco Bay area, nobody had a chance.
"We're all disappointed that we didn't have the opportunity to complete things today," said Tour Tournament Director Orlando Pope. "It was shaping up to be quite a finish. A lot of people worked very hard this week. Unfortunately our Tour has a very limited provision for pushing play into Monday, but that option wasn't available to us."