Graeme McDowell continued his love affair with California by winning for the first time in two years when he held off playing partner Keegan Bradley to clinch the World Challenge by three shots on Sunday.
The Northern Irishman, who had endured a title drought since his playoff victory here over tournament host Tiger Woods in 2010, ended his 2012 campaign on a triumphant note as he closed with a four-under-par 68 to post a 17-under total of 271.
Though McDowell survived a few anxious moments over the closing stretch at a rain-soaked Sherwood Country Club, he rebounded from a bogey at the 13th with birdies at the 16th and the par-four last to keep Bradley at bay.
"I'm just over the moon to kind of get the job done," McDowell told reporters after improving his remarkable World Challenge record to two wins and a runner-up spot in three starts.
"It's been too long. It's been a hell of a two years since I sat here as a winner, and we all put winning kind of up on a pedestal as the ultimate goal.
"Keegan really pushed me today. He played great, and we really separated ourselves from the field and kind of made it the matchplay-type vibe."
Bradley finished second after signing off with a 69. American Bo Van Pelt (70) was alone in third at 10 under, a stroke better than compatriots Rickie Fowler (69), Jim Furyk (70) and five-times champion Woods 71.
"Overall I struggled with my game this week," said defending champion Woods, who had been bidding for a fourth victory this year. "I didn't quite have it.
"It's been a tough week for all of us. Just tough conditions to get the ball close. And yesterday and today it played really long."
Two ahead at the start of another rain-soaked day at Sherwood, McDowell maintained his advantage when he and playing partner Bradley both recorded two-putt birdies at the par-five second.
Bradley trimmed McDowell's lead to one when he rolled in a 15-footer to birdie the fifth but he bogeyed the par-three eighth, after missing the green off the tee, and the ninth, where he three-putted, to slide three shots back.
Both players birdied the par-four 10th before McDowell tightened his grip on the title by draining a curling 30-foot birdie putt at the 11th to stretch his lead to four.
However, Bradley benefited from a two-shot swing at the par-five 13th where McDowell recorded his first bogey in 42 holes.
While the American two-putted there for birdie, the Northern Irishman stumbled to a three-putt bogey after finding the right rough off the tee for his lead to be halved to two strokes.
Bradley never got closer though as McDowell saved par on 14 after finding rough off the tee, sank a 10-foot birdie putt at 16 and almost holed out for birdie from greenside rough at 17.
"It was a good battle today," said Bradley after mixing five birdies with two bogeys. "Graeme just played so great. He just had one three-putt. Other than that, he just played awesome.
"Graeme really likes this place. Just when I thought maybe I'd have a good chance, he'd hole a putt or hit a chip like he did on 17. He's a champion, so I don't expect anything less out of him."
Photograph: Stephen Dunn/Getty Images
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