Daily Wrap-up: Round 4 Reno-Tahoe Open

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Aug. 7, 2011
By Staff and wire reports

RENO, Nevada -- Scott Piercy squandered a three-stroke lead, then dodged more trouble before making a 7-foot par putt on the final hole Sunday to win the Reno-Tahoe Open by one stroke.

Piercy shot a 2-under 70 to finish at 15-under 273, beating Pat Perez by one stroke and moving to 80th in the FedExCup standings.

"Finally," Piercy said after squandering a three-stroke lead then dodging more trouble down the stretch to win at Montreux Golf & Country Club on the edge of the Sierra Nevada.

"It kind of feels like I got the monkey off the back," said the 32-year-old Las Vegas native whose best previous finish in his three years on TOUR was a tie for sixth at the Honda Classic in 2009.

"I've been in the final group five times I think and didn't close the deal," he said. "I always thought I could do it and it was just a matter of doing it. Now I did it ... A big sigh of relief."

His final round of 2-under 70 to finish at 15-under 273 didn't come without some drama.

A day after setting the course record with a 61, he had to scramble his way around the 7,472-yard mountain layout to get that first victory in 91 career starts.

Piercy picked up where he left off on Saturday with a birdie on the first hole and closed out the front nine where he shot an 8-under 28 the day before with two more birdies to make the turn with a three-stroke lead at 16-under.

He still led by three through No. 11, but Perez birdied the par-4 12th and par-5 13th. Piercy then bogeyed the 365-yard, par-4 14th when he tried to drive the green, hit a cart path and bounced 30 yards left.

Tied with two holes to go, Perez gave a stroke back with a bogey the par-4 17th, missing an 8-footer for par. Piercy hit his drive 387 yards on the 616-yard downhill closing hole but it came to rest on the cart path, next to the sage brush.

After helping his playing partner Josh Teater look for his errant drive in sage on the other side of the fairway for more than five minutes, Piercy knocked his own ball out safely then pitched onto the green about 30 feet from the pin.

Needing only a 2-putt to win, he sent his first attempt 7 feet past the hole before wobbling in the winner.

"Yeah, 30 feet and 2-putting is not as easy as it looks sometimes," said Piercy, who started the week ranked 137th in the FedExCup standings but now is all but locked into making the Playoffs for the third consecutive season.

"I had one little hiccup and just played solid from there," he said about the lone bogey. "Coming down the stretch, you know, making pars is sometimes as good as making birdies."

The first native Nevadan to win the 13-year-old tourney also locked up a spot next week's PGA Championship.

"We had vacation planned next week. Now I've got to cancel," he joked afterwards.

Perez shot a 68 to finish at 274, his third runner-up finish to go with one career victory on TOUR.

"I missed three putts inside 10 feet the last three holes. That's not going to win," said Perez, who added there was nothing good he could think of to take away from the experience.

"No, no positive. Second, second, second. First loser," he said.

Steve Flesch, who won the 2007 Reno-Tahoe Open, shot a 68 on Sunday and Blake Adams had a 69 to tie for third another stroke back.

"Best I've played in a couple of years," said Flesch, 44, who claimed the most recent of his four career PGA TOUR victories four years ago.

"It makes me feel good that I can still play. I kind of would get to the point where I didn't know if I could even compete any more out here with some of these guys," he said. "I needed to play the par-5s better this week.

Jim Renner shot a 68 to claim fifth place at 12-under.

Montreux: Sunday
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 13th hole was the easiest with a Sunday scoring average of 4.560.
EAGLES: 7 BIRDIES: 29 PARS: 29 BOGEYS: 10 OTHER: 0
The par-4 17th hole was the toughest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.360.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 8 PARS: 44
BOGEYS: 15 OTHERS: 8
About the leader
• Scott Piercy, a 32-year-old native of Las Vegas, NV, carded a final-round 2-under 70 to defeat Pat Perez by one stroke to win the Reno-Tahoe Open his first-career victory on the PGA TOUR. With the win, Piercy collects 250 points and moves from No. 137 to No. 80 in the FedExCup standings, his highest ranking since he was No. 70 following the 2009 Reno-Tahoe Open.
• Piercy becomes the 11th first-time winner on the 2011 PGA TOUR and the seventh in the 13-year history of the Reno-Tahoe Open, joining Notah Begay III (1999), Chris Riley (2002), Vaughn Taylor (2004), Will MacKenzie (2006), Parker McLachlin (2008) and Matt Bettencourt (2010).
• Piercys victory comes one day following a Montreux G&CC course-record 11-under 61 which included eight-consecutive birdies on Nos. 2-9. The win earns him an invitation into next weeks PGA Championship which will mark his third start in a Major Championship (MC-2008 U.S. Open, T51-2011 U.S. Open).
• Piercy wins for the first time in three attempts when holding at least a share of the lead going into the final round of a TOUR event, with this weeks 54-hole lead his first in outright fashion. He previously held a share of the 54-hole lead in consecutive tournaments at the 2009 Turning Stone Resort Championship and Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, finishing T12 and T14, respectively.
• In three previous starts at the Reno-Tahoe Open, Piercy finished T63 (2006), T53 (2009) and missed the cut (2010).
• Piercy has made nine of 15 cuts on the PGA TOUR in 2011, with his previous-best finish a T6 two weeks ago at the RBC Canadian Open. His career-best showing on TOUR was a T5 at the 2009 Honda Classic.

Steve Elkington and first-round leader Nick O'Hern both closed with 71s to finish in a group another two strokes back with Matt McQuillan (66) and Ben Martin (69).

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