Joaquin Niemann of Chile won the LIV Golf Adelaide tournament with an incredible closing round.
On Sunday, Niemann defeated Mexican Abraham Ancer by two strokes at the Grange golf club with an impressive seven-under 65.
Niemann received the $US4 million winners' check after finishing the event at 13 under.
Ancer shot 11 under after dominating the last round for a large portion of it until bogeying the 14th and 17th holes.
Carlos Ortiz and David Puig of Spain shared third place at nine under, ahead of former world No. 1 Jon Rahm (seven under) and Richard Bland (eight under).
Niemann won the LIV Golf Tour for the third time with seven birdies in a flawless final round.
Marc Leishman, an Australian golfer, finished three under par and tied for twenty-first place.
Matt Jones finished three over par, Lucas Herbert finished even, while Marc Leishman and Cameron Smith finished one under par. Unfortunately, they were unable to retain their team championship title for Ripper Golf Club.
The all-Australian team finished with a cumulative score of one under, 21 strokes behind the victorious Fireballs GC, which was led by the legendary Sergio Garcia of Spain and included Ancer.
Niemann, who also won the Australian Open in 2023, won the match, and Adelaide was granted the right to host an LIV Golf tournament until 2031.
Before moving to a city course that Greg Norman renovated, the competition will continue to be held at The Grange, where over 100,000 people attended the most recent tournament, until 2028.
The present North Adelaide golf course, which is located on the outskirts of Adelaide's core business center, will be designed and renovated under Norman's supervision.
The agreement to hold the fourth LIV event in the capital of South Africa, Adelaide, was set to expire next year.
Premier Peter Malinauskas of South Australia, however, was able to win an extension when other Australian towns expressed interest in hosting.
There are now three public courses at the North Adelaide location: a par-3 course, a lesser par-68 course, and a championship-length par-72 course.