Seamus Power picked up a cheque for €213,000 after finishing down the field at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.
The Waterford man began well in Hawaii, but had fallen down the leaderboard by Sunday. He finished in a tie for 25th after a closing round of 70.
His final round included birdies on the third, fifth and ninth as he finished on 15-under for the tournament, which was won by Jon Rahm.
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The Spaniard amazingly overturned a seven-shot deficit, with a significant helping hand from Collin Morikawa, to claim a remarkable victory and pick up €2.5million in prize money.
Morikawa began the day with a six-shot lead and was seven clear after covering the first six holes in three under par, but would not make another birdie until the 18th and gradually saw his advantage whittled away at Kapalua.
Rahm, who shot 33 under par in finishing runner-up to Cameron Smith last year, recovered from a bogey on the first with eight birdies in the next 13 holes and then holed from 12 feet for an eagle on the par-five 15th.
That took the former world number one to within one of the lead and moments later he was tied, Morikawa thinning a bunker shot on the 14th across the green to drop his first shot of the entire week.
Morikawa, who squandered a five-shot lead and the chance to become world number one in the final round of the Hero World Challenge in December 2021, was understandably feeling the pressure and duffed his pitch to the par-five 15th to card a second consecutive bogey.
Spinning his approach to the 16th off the front of the green cost Morikawa a third straight bogey and Rahm’s birdie on the 18th effectively sealed victory thanks to a stunning closing 63.
At 27 under par Rahm finished two shots ahead of Morikawa, whose birdie on the 18th completed a final round of 72.
“If you told me at the beginning of the round, after that bogey, I was going to do what I did I don’t know if I would have believed you,” Rahm told NBC.
“But at that point it’s not like winning is really that in mind, you’ve just got to get to work and start making birdies and that’s what I did.
“On 15 is when it truly became reality, when I had that putt to get within one shot and knowing how good I was playing, 16 and 18 are good birdie options.
“That putt went in and then on 17 I couldn’t believe it when I missed the green and we had a one-shot lead. It took quite an effort to just settle myself down and change my mindset.”
Morikawa admitted to reporters he was feeling “sadness” after play ended.
“Sadness. I don’t know. It sucks. You work so hard and you give yourself these opportunities and just bad timing on bad shots and kind of added up really quickly”, he said.
“Don’t know what I’m going to learn from this week, but it just didn’t seem like it was that far off. It really wasn’t. Yeah, it sucks.”
He was also asked if Sunday’s result marked the highlight or lowlight of his professional career.
“Of my career so far? I would say so,” he replied.
“Can’t really think of anything else. Yeah, it’s hard to look at the positives, it really is.”
The California product, however, did say the result could not be compared to the world challenge in December 2021.
“Hero is different. Hero started off bad, never found it, never felt good, just bad. Today it felt fine. Just made three poor swings, really, at the wrong times. It’s never a good time to put a poor swing on it, but sometimes it works out and these never worked out.”
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