After five days of glorious weather with little wind, the County Louth links north of Dublin finally showed some of its teeth, albeit not the full set of molars it showed when Shane Lowry won the 2009 Irish Open as an amateur in strong winds and near horizontal rain.
The wind, which sometimes gusted above 20 mph, probably proved the difference in a match neither player, the respective best juniors from Spain and the Netherlands, deserved to lose. Lafeber’s low ball flight was key.
The reigning Dutch Stroke Play champion, which he won just before arriving in Ireland, kept his ball under the wind while Horno sometimes struggled with his high launch angle.
Lafeber was never down in the match and held a four-hole advantage through 11 holes. However, Horno got back to all square after 13 holes of the afternoon round.
What slight disadvantage he may have had off the tee, Horno compensated for with an ability to scramble when he looked like losing holes. For example, on the par-4 4th hole in the afternoon Horno’s tee shot landed a few feet from the out of bounds stakes down the right of the hole. Unsighted from the green and with Lafeber finding the putting surface from the fairway, Horno hit a wedge over a towering dune to 20 feet and holed the putt to win the hole.
Horno, who was bidding to become the ninth Spanish winner, pegged Lafeber back to all-square after 31 holes and they were still all square after the 33rd. The Dutch player looked like losing the 34th to go one down for the first time in the match, but holed a clutch 15 footer for par. A 25-foot birdie putt at the next to go one up with one to play seemed to have given Lafeber the title. However, he missed a six-foot birdie putt on 36th and had to go an extra hole.