Indian golfer Rahil Gangjee carded a sedate two-under 70 to open his season with a fine top-10 finish at the Zaykabar Myanmar Open on Sunday.
Gangjee, who suffered an early setback in the form of a double bogey on the par-5 second hole, finished with a four-day total of 14-under 274 in tied seventh place.
Himmat Rai also suffered a double bogey though late in the round on par-3 15th but still finished with a 68 and moved to a creditable tied 13th at 12-under 276.
Sujjan Singh (67) made a good return from injury with a total of nine-under 279 alongside fellow Chandigarh youngster, Ajeetesh Sandhu (68) in tied 24th place. Shankar Das (69) finished in a tie for 39th at seven-under 281.
At the top, Thailand's Chawalit Plaphol dashed Sri Lankan Mithun Perera's hopes of making history when he birdied the last two holes to win the title.
Overnight leader Chawalit was tied with Mithun on 17-under heading into the last hole but the Thai set up a three-foot birdie putt with an exquisite approach shot at the par five 18th hole to win his fourth Asian Tour title at the Royal Mingalardon Golf and Country Club.
Chawalit closed with a three-under-par 69 while Mithun, aiming to be the first Sri Lankan to win on the Asian Tour, fought bravely with a sensational 65 at the $300,000 event, which is the curtain raiser for the 10th Asian Tour season.
There was heartbreak again for Thailand's Kiradech Aphibarnrat, who lost in a play-off last year, as he settled for third following a 70. Hwang In-choon (67) of Korea, Darren Beck (69) of Australia and Angelo Que (70) of the Philippines were a further shot back in fourth.
"I'm happy but a first win in two years is not enough! I want to win more Asian Tour titles. I knew at the 17th hole that Mithun was on 17-under. Luckily, I managed to hole a 15-foot birdie putt (17) to tie for the lead," smiled Chawalit, who registered 18-under 270 and won $54,000.
Chawalit, 38, was a figure of consistency through the week and held the lead for most of the round until Perera came charging home with five birdies in the last seven holes.
Perera finished 50th on the Asian Tour Order of Merit last year to earn an Asian Tour card for 2013 and his career has been on an upswing since then.
Despite his defeat, the Sri Lankan, who is the son to Nandasena, a famous name on the old Asian circuit during the 1980s and 1990s, remains upbeat of winning his first title on the region's premier Tour.
"All you need is one good week to turn your life around. I think the win is not far away for me. I'm sure my father and my country are proud of me. This week, I flew the Sri Lankan flag high," said the 26-year-old, who was five shots off the lead at the start of the day.
Thai rising star Kiradech cut a forlorn figure as he failed to make amends for last year's play-off defeat.
"I played good this week. I couldn't make a putt on the front nine but tried hard. I think the key moment for me was when I birdied 15 to tie for the lead. Again, I couldn't make birdie putts in the last three holes. It was still a good attempt from me."
Photograph: Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images
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