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Rested a little, Stenson tries to stay hot at Sun City

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Henrik Stenson (Stuart Franklin/ Getty Images)

SUN CITY, South Africa – Ten days away from golf was just about enough for Henrik Stenson to get his “funky” right wrist back to being close to healthy.

Stenson knows he needs more time to recover fully, but when he’s in this kind of form it’s easy to understand why the Swede doesn’t want to slow down.

The hottest golfer in the world is returning after a brief end-of-season break for this week’s Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City, hoping to continue the kind of play that earned him both the FedEx Cup and the European money title this year.

“It’s going to take some golfing to keep this up, what I managed to achieve this year,” Stenson said Wednesday at the casino resort in northern South Africa. “It’s been a dream year and a fantastic season for me. I’m still having little niggles, but it (the wrist) still seems to be fine to play and hit. I hope we can keep my body together.

“This is my 30th event this year and I’m in serious need of rest, but we’ll try to mobilize for the last little bit.”

If he needs any kind of reminder for how quickly fortunes can change, the third-ranked Stenson only needs to think back to his last tournament in South Africa at the end of 2012. Back then, his ranking had plummeted and he hadn’t won a title in 3 1/2 years, but his victory at the South African Open helped spark his historic run this year.

Whether he can earn another title at Sun City – where he won by nine shots in 2008 – will depend on “how much energy we can mobilize,” Stenson said.

Nedbank is a tougher test this year, as well, with the field having been increased from 12 to 30 players this year and the tournament being part of the 2014 European Tour schedule. U.S. Open champion Justin Rose, former No. 1 Luke Donald, Sergio Garcia and major winners Charl Schwartzel, Ernie Els, Louis Oosthuizen and defending champion Martin Kaymer are among the starters.

The 37-year-old Stenson played through the pain in his wrist during the final swing of the European Tour last month to keep his lead in the Race to Dubai standings _ with the help of pain killers, anti-inflammatories and plenty of ice. His last few weeks have been more about recovering than celebrating.

“I have spent more time in the ice bucket than a bottle of Moet & Chandon over the last month,” he said earlier this week.

Having sprayed his share of champagne this season, though, Stenson is now facing constant questions over when he’ll win his first major. And for next year, that’s definitely one of the goals.

“The majors are the next step for me. I’ve won great tournaments on both the PGA and European Tours,” he said. “I won both the Order of Merits and played in the Ryder Cup team. … I’ve pretty much achieved everything in the game that I want to except for winning a major championship. I must keep on working on my game and following up on a great season.

“(But) There are a couple of traps and I think expectation is one of them. Another is handling my time. The demand for my time is probably five times as much now as it was six months ago. When you’re flavour of the month everyone wants a piece of you … and if you don’t get rest and practice in then it will show up in your game. It will be key to look after those areas.”

And after Sun City, Stenson will follow his own advice and finally take an extended break.

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Rory McIlroy wins Australian Open

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Rory McIlroy birdied the 18th hole to beat Adam Scott at the Australian Open on Sunday, winning for the first time in 2013 and denying Scott the Triple Crown of Australian golf.

McIlroy started the last round four shots behind Scott, but drew even when he eagled the seventh and birdied the eighth.

Scott went a shot ahead with a birdie at the ninth. The pair then went shot for shot over the back nine before the dramatic finish.

Scott’s approach shot went over the back of the green and his chip went well past the hole, with two putts bringing a bogey. McIlroy hit his approach to 10 feet and sank the putt to win by a shot.

“I wanted to get a win and finally I’ve been able to get one,” McIlroy said. “But more satisfying than that is being able to take one of the best players in the world down the stretch and come out on top.

“Adam is a phenomenal golfer, a great competitor and probably an even better guy and I feel a bit sorry that I was the one that ruined the triple crown for him.”

Scott was attempting to become only the second player after compatriot Robert Allenby in 2005 to win his country’s Triple Crown by taking the Australian Open, Australian Masters and Australian PGA titles in the same season.

He carried his form from the Masters and PGA tournaments into the Open, shattering the course record with a 10-under 62 in his opening round.

He came into the final day at 16 under, with rounds of 62, 70 and 68, four shots ahead of McIlroy, who was four ahead of the next closest challenger.

That, in effect, made Sunday’s final round a shootout between the No. 2-ranked Scott and Northern Ireland’s McIlroy, who was the world’s top-ranked player last year.

Scott was left to rue a series of missed birdie opportunities, failing to make six putts from within 12 feet during his final round.

“Nothing was going my way on the greens today,” Scott said. “I could have put this thing away early on if the putter was behaving how it should have, how it did the rest of the week.”

Both players took irons from the tee on the last hole and landed their shots adjacent to each other on the fairway. Scott’s approach landed ahead of the hole, but a bounce sent the ball flying through the back of the green.

Rather than pitch and run back onto the green, Scott chose to give his chip some loft. It failed to pull up, rolling onto the lower tier of the green and he did well to salvage a bogey.

McIlroy stood assessing his 10-foot putt during Scott’s excursions. After Scott holed out, McIlroy rolled in a slow putt that just made it to the hole.

“I didn’t think it was going to unfold the way it did,” McIlroy said. “It’s hard not to feel some guilt in the way I won it. Having a one-shot lead going into the last having it taken away from you right at the very end, it’s tough.”

McIlroy finished with an 18-under 270. Scott finished six shots ahead of Australian John Senden (11 under).

Senden and Australians Bryden MacPherson and Rhein Gibson, who tied for fourth at 9 under, all qualified for next year’s British Open.