Na wins Mark Christopher Classic by three shots
RANCHO CUCAMONGA, Calif. -- PGA Tour player Kevin Na won a Nationwide Tour event on his home course Sunday, closing with a 2-under 69 for a three-stroke victory in the Mark Christopher Charity Classic.
The 23-year-old Na, making his first start since withdrawing from the PGA Tour's Houston Open in late April because of a hand injury, led wire-to-wire, finishing with a 16-under 268 total on the Empire Lakes Golf Club course.
"I was hoping I'd have a chance to win because this is my home course and in my hometown," said Na, who skipped his senior year of high school to turn pro at 17. "Playing on my home course was a huge advantage. The course was playing so difficult. Most everyone today was near even par, which shows how tough it was playing."
Na, who matched the course record with a 62 on Thursday and followed with rounds of 66 and 71 to take a one-stroke lead into the final day, earned $90,000 for the victory in only his second career Nationwide Tour start. The South Korea-born player also won the Volvo Masters of Asia and Long Beach Open, both in 2002.
"It is nice to have another win on the resume," Na said. "I played solid the whole week. I putted well and hit it well all week."
Na, who plans to return to the PGA Tour next week for the Frys.com Open in Las Vegas, broke his hand in a car-door accident in January. He tried to play through the pain, eventually making nine starts on the PGA Tour before taking a long break after opening with a 77 in Houston. He's currently 201st on the PGA Tour money list.
"The layoff was frustrating because I wanted to play, but what can you do?" said Na, who has earned more than $2 million since joining the PGA Tour in 2004. "But it freshened me up mentally and I think that is why I played so well this week. This is a big confidence boost for me. People don't realize how good the Nationwide Tour is. I believe it will become easier to win now."
Chris Tidland (66) and Jeff Quinney (71) tied for second at 13 under, New Zealand's Grant Waite (71) was another stroke back, and Ken Duke (72) was fifth at 11 under.
Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press