Brandon Stone wins the Scottish Open

Brandon Stone wins the Scottish Open… but misses out by one in attempt to record the first 59-shot round in European Tour history

  • South Africa’s Brandon Stone was crowned Scottish Open champion on Sunday
  • He carded a final round of 60 – one shot short of a European Tour record
  • He finished four shots ahead of second-placed Englishman Eddie Pepperell

South African Brandon Stone won the Scottish Open by four strokes on Sunday but missed a chance to become the first to shoot 59 on the European Tour.

Stone’s shot at history went begging when he could not convert a short birdie putt at the final hole at Gullane Golf Club east of Edinburgh.

But the 10-under-par 60 was more than enough to secure his third victory on the European Tour and his first outside his home country.

Brandon Stone celebrates with the Scottish Open trophy after winning it on Sunday

Stone carded a final round of 60 on his way to finishing four shots ahead of the field

Stone carded a final round of 60 on his way to finishing four shots ahead of the field

He finished at 20-under 260, four clear of Englishman Eddie Pepperell who carded a final-round 64.

Stone and Pepperell secured late exemptions into the British Open starting at Carnoustie on Thursday.

Overnight leader Jens Dantorp of Sweden clinched the third Open berth up for grabs when he tied for third on 15 under with South African Trevor Immelman and American Luke List.

‘It’s been a long 18-month journey, making a few changes, but the swing felt incredible today, the putting felt even better and the mental state was flawless,’ said the 25-year-old Stone who arrived in Scotland with no form to speak of this season.

‘A day shooting 60 and winning … is something I’m going to hold dear to my heart for a very long time,’ he added.

‘Hopefully, I can find some accommodation (in Carnoustie). I wasn’t exactly planning on going through.’

Yet, Stone was one shot away from carding a 59 - which would've been a European Tour record

Yet, Stone was one shot away from carding a 59 – which would’ve been a European Tour record

Stone’s final margin on another day of low scoring on the bone-dry links course disguised the close battle for most of the final round, with the winner only breaking clear when he sank a 30-foot putt to eagle the par-five 16th.

History beckoned when he stuck his approach to about eight feet at the last, but his putt for 59 broke left to narrowly miss the hole, leaving Stone in the unusual position of looking dejected despite his dominant performance.

It was the 19th round of 60 in European Tour history.

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