
Austria's Bernd Wiesberger took advantage of a six-shot swing down the back nine at Enhance Anting Golf Club to win the 2026 Volvo China Open by three strokes on Sunday.
The former Ryder Cup and LIV golfer was three back of Adrian Otaegui at the turn but chipped in for birdie at the par-5 10th, beginning a sprint towards the line which coincided with his playing partner heading in the opposite direction.
Wiesberger birdied 11 and 13 to reach 19-under, a score he never deviated from for the remainder of the tournament, while the Spanish-born Otaegui bogeyed 12 and then crucially 16 to fall behind.
A horrible double-bogey seven at the last saw Otaegui - who has represented the UAE since November 2024 - end on 16-under after a level par closing round as Wiesberger positively waltzed his way to a first win since May 2021.
Back in the winner's cirlce! 🏆#VolvoChinaOpen pic.twitter.com/lRkFMKJnimApril 26, 2026
Reacting to his ninth DP World Tour triumph but first in 1,792 days, an emotional Wiesberger said: "I said [on Saturday] it was a tough couple of years. Unbelievable week. I played my heart out today, it wasn't pretty at times but I got it done.
"Adrian is a great competitor and had it under control, but something happened on that 10th hole that I can't explain. That's how golf goes sometimes.
"I'm super proud of sticking through hard times on the golf course lately, but this is for everyone at home and, yeah, I couldn't be happier."
A victory that was worth the wait! 🏆Bernd Wiesberger has to wait 1,792 days between victories on the DP World Tour 📅#VolvoChinaOpen pic.twitter.com/XyuVgTWqEZApril 26, 2026
Wiesberger started Sunday a stroke behind Otaegui but the latter made the ideal start via gains at three and four, extending his advantage to two shots as the Austrian made birdie at the fourth as well.
Another birdie from Otaegui at the eighth allowed him to make the turn three in front before Wiesberger's inspired chip-in seemingly turned the tide in his favor.
Looking for his second China Open title, Otaegui still looked in control as late as the 16th before a poor tee shot at the par 3 hole began his ultimate downfall.
In contrast, the former LIV golfer - who has struggled for form since appearing for Team Europe at the 2021 Ryder Cup - cruised home through some really steady golf and catapulted himself up 54 places in the Race To Dubai rankings.
Wiesberger is now 16th on the season standings and second in the Asian Swing, which offers a place at the PGA Championship to its winner following next week's Turkish Airlines Open.
Sweden's Mikael Lindberg finished third on 14-under while South Africa's Shaun Norris took solo fourth. An outstanding final round 64 from Germany's Freddy Schott saw him end solo fifth.
VOLVO CHINA OPEN LEADERBOARD
- -19 Bernd Wiesberger (67)
- -16 Adrian Otaegui (71)
- -14 Mikael Lindberg (67)
- -13 Shaun Norris (70)
- -12 Freddy Schott (64)
- -11 Nathan Kimsey (68)
- -11 Tom Vaillant (67)
- -10 Alejandro Del Rey (72)
- -10 Antoine Rozner (71)
- -10 Darius Van Driel (69)
- -10 Ashun Wu (68)
- -10 Anthony Quayle (67)
UPDATES FROM...
WELCOME
Hello and welcome to Golf Monthly's coverage of the Volvo China Open final round. We're into the closing stages now, and with four holes left the top-two are level.
Adrian Otaegui was ahead by three not too long ago, but he dropped a shot at the 12th and Wiesberger found a couple more birdies to pull alongside.
The Spanish-born pro, who now represents the UAE, is looking for his sixth DP World Tour title and first since he switched nationalities back in 2024 while Wiesberger is hunting his ninth career trophy on the European circuit.
We join the action on the 420-yard par-4 15th hole with both players in the fairway and looking to go close.
SOCIABLE GOLF
Both players have wedges into the 15th, but neither can access the inviting front-right pin location just over water and their respective golf balls are within a yard of each other in the opposite corner.
You can imagine, at this stage, neither wants to give the other one anything so there was no chance of taking a risk with that water lurking.
TENSION RISES
Wiesberger was less than a yard behind his playing partner but didn't really give Otaegui that much of a read with a wayward putt to the left. The pace was good, though.
With the chance to take the lead, Otaegui pushes his putt wide right. Both tidy up for par and we carry on as we were down the 16th.
SCRAPPY PLAY
The par-3 16th is playing 187 yards today. Wiesberger takes an 8-iron but shoves his tee shot somewhat and he'll have a monster two-putt to contend with.
Meanwhile, Otaegui pulls his effort left and watches it slam into the green-side bunker. To make matters worse, he is on a slight downslope so may well be staring bogey in the face.
WIESBERGER RETURNS TO THE TOP
The last time Wiesberger was in the lead was hole 13 of the third round, but he's back there now after a brilliant two-putt allows him to mark down a par.
Otaegui was unable to stop his bunker shot anywhere close to the hole and was left with upwards of 25 feet for par. He produced an excellent effort, but it just tailed off and that wayward tee shot has ultimately cost him big time.
FINE MARGINS
The 17th is a short par 4, and both players in the final group are set up perfectly to go close with their second shots.
Wiesberger is in the fairway, though, so will have the option to clean his golf ball with Lift, Clean and Place in operation. However, Otaegui's golf ball finished just in the first cut so he will have to hope for the best.
GIR FOR WIESBERGER
Otaegui's approach falls just off the green and he will have a slightly awkward birdie putt to come. It also moves pretty severely from left to right as he looks.
On the other hand, Wiesberger sticks his wedge shot to within 10 feet and has a much straighter attempt. Can he take advantage and go down 18 two ahead, perhaps?
AS YOU WERE
Well then. Both players hit good putts, but both burn the edge and walk away with par. Otaegui's looked good for 95% of the way but turned its nose up at the last moment. Wiesberger gave his look too much respect, I feel.
So we go down the 18th with Wiesberger just one stroke ahead. His most recent victory arrived at the Made in HimmerLand 2021.
Since then, he's been to LIV Golf, left LIV Golf, lost form, rediscovered his form and now he's here. This would be a significant win for the 40-year-old if he can close it out on the risk-reward par 5.
TROUBLE OFF THE TEE
Wiesberger has made par at the 18th three times so far this week. I'm not sure whether he'd take another at this stage. Regardless, his tee shot is wonderful and he can have a go at the green from there.
However, the same cannot be said for Otaegui. The UAE native made par on Thursday and Friday before a birdie yesterday. That's the bare minimum today, but he hasn't given himself the best chance.
His drive goes way right and looks to have landed in some very thick grass, although the TV cameras haven't picked it up yet. Otaegui was going to reload, but the ball has been found so it might not be game over just yet.
GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS
It could be worse for Otaegui, but it could also be a lot better. His ball is in a patch of unmown grass between some trees off to the right but he does have a window to pitch out. It won't be a full swing, though, so going for the green is out of the question.
What does Wiesberger do now? Does this change his approach?
CLOSE CALL
That was almost it in a flash for Otaegui. He attempted a slinging draw out of the wilderness, which I think was a lay-up, but it scuttled on down the fairway and was heading very quickly towards the brook which splits this 614-yard hole.
With red stakes in close proximity, Otaegui's ball slammed the brakes on at the last moment before hitting the water. It's dry, but in possibly the worst possible place, balanced on the last patch of grass before a rock and on a downslope with a bridge not too far in front.
As far as the green goes, he can't see it. The flag isn't full visible either and he's technically short-sided. Rather you than me, Adrian.
Wiesberger opts to lay up. There's no point taking any chances with Otaegui's hole unfolding like this.
GAME OVER
That is one of the most remarkable golf shots I've ever seen, and I don't mean in a positive way. Otaegui almost looked like he was playing for a bank off the grandstands, which he achieved, but the ball cannoned back across the green and into the water. That must be it now for Otaegui. The final hole has been an absolute mess.
WIESBERGER SETS UP WIN
For the Austrian, the 72nd hole has been positively serene. He wedges into the heart of the green and can two-putt for the win from 25 feet or so.
OTAEGUI (FINALLY) TAKES MEDICINE
Otaegui's ball was actually visible in the water, but he wanted no part of that and wisely takes a drop into the upslope of rough nearby. This is about ensuring second place now.
BERND WIESBERGER WINS VOLVO CHINA OPEN
Wiesberger rolls his birdie putt down the slope and leaves a knock-in to win it. The dream scenario for the former Ryder Cup and LIV golfer. It's 1,792 days since his last DP World Tour victory. Now the emotion can flow.
MARGIN OF VICTORY
Wiesberger won by three strokes in the end as Otaegui made double at the last and the Austrian gladly took his fourth par of the week.
A final round 67 (-4) for Wiesberger left him on -19.