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Image result for Golf: Ryder cup hero Brandt Snedeker edges Kiwi Michael Hendry in Fiji International Brandt Snedeker came, saw and blew whatever remains of the Fiji International field away.

A week subsequent to being a part of the fruitful American Ryder Cup crusade, Snedeker wrecked his opponents at Natadola Bay to win by nine shots.

He checked a last cycle four-under standard 68 in yet more swirling conditions, with only one intruder in a generally amazing showcase. Snedeker completed at 16-under for the competition, with the learning he would bank $265,000 champ's check all through the vast majority of the last round.

"I couldn't have requested a superior begin to the day birdieing the primary opening," he said. "I never truly let up."

It tops off a noteworthy fortnight for Snedeker, who secured three focuses for the US in their win over Europe at Hazeltine.

"It's been a really decent two weeks. I was kidding with some individual that I may need to include another competition one week from now," he chuckled.

It's his first win since the Farmers Insurance Open in January and twelfth triumph as an expert. En route he's won eight times on the PGA Tour, including the lucrative FedEx Cup. Presently, he simply needs a noteworthy.

"I've done a ton of other stuff in my profession," he said. "There's a great deal of stuff amongst from time to time (Masters 2017) I have to do."

However, he feels Augusta is his absolute best at getting through at that level.

"I feel like the Masters is a place that I know ridiculously well. I cherish that place. I believe it has something uncommon in my heart and that would be the one I would need to win."

Kiwi Michael Hendry had a noteworthy second putting himself. In the wake of opening with a first round of one-more than 73, the Japan Tour player enhanced consistently, completing with an even standard 72 to finish a seven-under week.

Hendry said it was a to a great degree disappointing last round, particularly with the putter.

"I hit such a variety of good shots. I truly just played one terrible gap, yet just putts where I thought I'd hit in the right line, they didn't sever or just ricocheted line."

However, he's not going to give it a chance to get to him. "That is golf. I had an inclination that it wasn't any blame of my own. I had an inclination that I was hitting the putts where I needed to, yet it was just truly extreme to peruse," Hendry finished up.

While he hasn't had a win this year, it's his eighth main five complete and sees him bring home $176,686. "I'm to a great degree content with the way I'm playing. I can't request more other than a win," Hendry said. "My diversion's there, it's simply having a week where the putts drop."

The third-positioned Kiwi was in wonder of Snedeker's strength. "He's one of the best players on the planet which is as it should be. Also, it isn't so much that he's a million miles superior to anything everybody at everything, he's simply that tad bit superior to anything everybody at everything."

Hendry's prize of $176,686 puts him at the highest point of the PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit. He now heads to the Japan Open this week where he would like to expand on his 6th put in on the Japan Tour's Request of Merit.

In the interim, a bird at the standard five seventeenth impelled New Zealand's Brad Shilton to a last round of three-under 69 and into a tie for third complete at six-under overall.​

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