Tom Kim produced a links golf masterclass at The Renaissance Club to the east of Edinburgh to claim a convincing victory in the Genesis Scottish Open.

The South Korean was flawless, being the only one of the 71-strong field not to drop a single shot in the testing winds of the final round.

Six birdies in total saw him post a closing 64 for a 17 under par total, two shots clear of Min Woo Lee who carded a 67, and four clear of a group of four players, comprising Matt Fitzpatrick, Johnny Keefer, Keita Nakajima and local favourite Bob MacIntyre.

It was the 24-year-old from Seoul’s first victory on the DP World Tour and his fourth triumph in total on the PGA TOUR in this, a co-sanctioned event between the two Tours.

Starting the final round one shot off the pace, Kim made his intentions clear early with a birdie four on the opening hole and further gains at the fourth and seventh saw him to the turn in 32 to edge in front.

Several challengers threatened from the pack but birdies at the tenth and 12th reaffirmed his control and when an excellent approach to six feet at the 16th yielded another birdie three, the title was firmly in his grasp.

He gave Lee – waiting in the final group in the 18th fairway behind him – a slight glimmer of hope when he pushed his approach shot through the green at the last, but a nerveless up and down finally closed the door on any hopes the Australian was harbouring.

Rory McIlroy shared seventh on 268 with Michael Thorbjornsen and although the reigning Masters champion matched Kim’s closing 64, the damage to his title credentials came via a third round 73 which left the Northern Irishman too much ground to make up in the final round.

Earlier in the day, hopes had been high for a home triumph courtesy of MacIntyre, who returned in the early morning to complete his third round which was disrupted on Saturday night by fading light and did so in style, storming into a tie for the lead with Lee and Fitzpatrick entering the fourth and final round.

A birdie at the opening hole had the Scottish galleries dreaming of a repeat of the Ryder Cup player’s win in the event in 2024, but a run of four bogeys in seven holes from the fourth put paid to his chances. The 29-year-old from Oban did have the consolation, however, of claiming the Jock MacVicar AGW Memorial Award given to the leading Scot in the tournament in memory of the legendary Scottish journalist who passed away in 2021.

Other players taking something from the week were the Americans Keefer and Thorbjornsen alongside Frenchman Victor Perez, who all claimed spots in next week’s Open Championship at Royal Birkdale through the final event in the current Open Qualifying Series.

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