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Gutschewski Ties for 2nd Place
Omaha's Scott Gutschewski tied for second place at the Utah Championship on the Web.Com Tour. The former University of Nebraska golfer ended up at 14-under par. Doug Labelle won the tournament at 15-under par.

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Reporter: PGA TOUR

All week long at the Utah Championship, Doug LaBelle II talked about his putting and the work he needed to do on the greens if he expected to win. Sunday, his most important putt was a five-foot, downhiller for par on the 72nd hole. When that putt dropped, it kept him at 15-under and gave the Scottsdale, Ariz., resident a one-stroke victory. His 18th-hole heroics kept him out of what would have been a five-man playoff.


The victory was LaBelle's second on the Web.com Tour, six years in the waiting. He's played 94 Web.com Tour events since he won the 2006 Price Cutter Charity Championship, and he also made 57 PGA TOUR starts during that period, with only two top-10s.

"I'm very surprised to be sitting here," LaBelle said after accepting the winner's trophy and the check for $99,000. "My goal was to make as many birdies as I could. I was conservative-aggressive. I was trying to go at some flags but not be stupid about it."

LaBelle trailed by five shots when the day began but started quickly, making birdies on his first two holes. "I felt like I had to shoot 7- or 8-under to have a chance to win," LaBelle continued. "I got off to a good start then I gave away a couple (bogeys at the third and fourth holes) and another one at nine. Now I'm thinking my chances of winning are probably pretty slim unless I went really low on the back nine, which I know is doable. I just tried to hang in there. Thankfully, I had just enough in me."

The "enough" included a difficult chip from deep rough behind the 18th green, and that tricky, downhill five-footer on the last hole.

"Not very comfortable," he said when asked about how he felt standing over that par putt. "I missed about 10 of those this week. I wanted to get [the chip] below the hole. I'd rather have 15 feet below the hole than five feet straight above I wasn't able to get it past the hole, but I got it down there not too far."

Michael Putnam began the final round with a four-stroke lead, but he struggled from the start and shot a 3-over 74 to finish in the group tied for second that included Sam Saunders, Scott Gutschewski and James Hahn. Putnam's 74 was a stroke worse than his previous-worst score at Willow Creek Country Club, coming at the 2009 Utah Championship.

Putnam still had a slim chance on the final hole but needed a hole-in-one on No. 18 to force a playoff. Instead, he settled for a birdie, only his second of the day. His grouping, which also included Robert Streb, who was alone in second when the day began, and Andres Gonzales, who was tied for third, finished a cumulative 8-over for the day. Streb tied for 22nd and Gonzales tied for ninth.

Sam Saunders, a Web.com Tour rookie, went in the opposite direction of those guys. Following a 6-under 65 Saturday, he came back with a final-round 67 to tie for second, matching his grandfather's performance 10 miles from here 56 years ago. At the 1958 Utah Open, then a PGA TOUR event, Arnold Palmer tied for second at Salt Lake Country Club, a stroke back of winner Dow Finsterwald.

Sunday, Saunders stood on the par-3 18th hole a stroke behind and needing birdie. His 35-foot, downhill birdie putt slid past the hole, but he made his par putt that, for at least a moment, kept him alive for a spot in a playoff.

"I'm really happy with the way I played," said Saunders, who recorded his career-best Web.com Tour performance with his runner-up finish. "That shot there on the last hole, I hit a good shot. But making that par putt after I ran that first one by was as satisfying as anything. Even though I didn't get the win, to make that putt was big for the rest of the year."

Hahn shot a final-round 65, but a bogey on the 18th hole left him at 14-under. Convinced his score wasn't going to be good enough to get in a playoff, he left Willow Creek Country Club and headed for the airport. A tournament official summoned him back when nobody took control of the tournament.

"I play better when I have fun. But you also have fun when you're playing better. It's like which came first, the chicken or the egg?" said Hahn, who earned his first career title earlier this season, at The Rex Hospital Open. "So I said, 'Let's just have fun and hopefully I'll play well instead of the other way around. It worked until the last hole."

Last month, LaBelle had the taste of a final-round lead he let slip away at the Mexico Open. It was his putter that failed him. This time, things were different.

"I'm ecstatic. The confidence is great. The win feels great," he said.
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