21 year old Hideki Matsuyama won the Casio World Open in Kochi, Japan on Sunday. Jiji Press / AFP
21 year old Hideki Matsuyama won the Casio World Open in Kochi, Japan on Sunday. Jiji Press / AFP
21 year old Hideki Matsuyama won the Casio World Open in Kochi, Japan on Sunday. Jiji Press / AFP
21 year old Hideki Matsuyama won the Casio World Open in Kochi, Japan on Sunday. Jiji Press / AFP

Hideki Matsuyama becomes first rookie to top Japan Golf Tour money list


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Hideki Matsuyama became the first rookie to win the Japan Golf Tour money list Sunday when the 21 year old clinched his fourth victory of the season at the Casio World Open.
Matsuyama only turned professional in April but capped a brilliant debut season by pipping Yuta Ikeda at the Kochi Kuroshio Country Club course in southern Japan.
He held on to his overnight lead to defeat Ikeda by just one stroke with a final round 70 for a 12-under-par total of 276.
"It makes me happy to win a tournament and clinch the money title at a course where I practised golf when I was in middle school and high school," Matsuyama said.
"I have never played so patiently in tournaments in which I led going into the final round. I managed to hold on," he added after picking up the winners cheque of 40 million yen (Dh1.5m).
Matsuyama made headlines in 2010 when he captured the Asian Amateur Championship, earning a ticket to the 2011 US Masters as the first Japanese amateur to do so.
There he won leading amateur and has since found the transition to the professional ranks an easy one.
His victory on Sunday increased his winnings for the year to an unassailable 201 million yen with one more tournament left in the Japan tour's 25-event season.
He is only the third player to break the 200 million yen mark following Masashi "Jumbo" Ozaki in 1994 and 1996 and Toshimitsu Izawa in 2001.
Remarkably, Matsuyama, who is due to graduate university in March, achieved the feat by playing in just 13 domestic tournaments – around 10 fewer than most tour regulars.
The Casio World Open was Matsuyama's fifth victory at a Japan Tour event. As an amateur in 2011 he won the high-profile Taiheiyo Masters by two strokes.
Second on the money list was South Korea's Kim Hyung-Sung at 124 million yen. Japan's Shingo Katayama was third at 110 million yen.
Matsuyama has yet to win abroad but has impressed at the majors. He was tied sixth in his debut at the British Open this year, finished joint 10th at the US Open and 19th at the PGA Championship.

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MATCH INFO

RB Leipzig 2 (Klostermann 24', Schick 68')

Hertha Berlin 2 (Grujic 9', Piatek 82' pen)

Man of the match Matheus Cunha (Hertha Berlin

Jawan
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BOSH!'s pantry essentials

Nutritional yeast

This is Firth's pick and an ingredient he says, "gives you an instant cheesy flavour". He advises making your own cream cheese with it or simply using it to whip up a mac and cheese or wholesome lasagne. It's available in organic and specialist grocery stores across the UAE.

Seeds

"We've got a big jar of mixed seeds in our kitchen," Theasby explains. "That's what you use to make a bolognese or pie or salad: just grab a handful of seeds and sprinkle them over the top. It's a really good way to make sure you're getting your omegas."

Umami flavours

"I could say soya sauce, but I'll say all umami-makers and have them in the same batch," says Firth. He suggests having items such as Marmite, balsamic vinegar and other general, dark, umami-tasting products in your cupboard "to make your bolognese a little bit more 'umptious'".

Onions and garlic

"If you've got them, you can cook basically anything from that base," says Theasby. "These ingredients are so prevalent in every world cuisine and if you've got them in your cupboard, then you know you've got the foundation of a really nice meal."

Your grain of choice

Whether rice, quinoa, pasta or buckwheat, Firth advises always having a stock of your favourite grains in the cupboard. "That you, you have an instant meal and all you have to do is just chuck a bit of veg in."