INDIANAPOLIS -- Gil Morgan posted a 3-under 69 to win the Comfort Classic senior tournament by two strokes.
Morgan trailed Mike McCullough by one stroke entering the final round at the 6,796-yard Brickyard Crossing course.Morgan, winner of six Senior PGA Tour events each of the past two years, including the Utah Showdown in 1998, won his first official event this year with a quick start as he birdied the first two holes to take the lead.
He saved the lead with a scrambling par on No. 12 and finished at 15-under 201, two strokes ahead of Ed Dougherty, who also closed with a 69.
Tom Jenkins finished another shot back after a final-round 71.
McCullough stayed close until finishing with a double bogey and bogey. He shot a 74 and finished in a fourth-place tie at 205 with J.C. Snead, who had a 67, and Walter Hall, who had a 68.
BRITISH MASTERS: At Woburn, England, Bob May, an American who plays on the European tour, overtook Colin Montgomerie to capture the British Masters by a stroke for his first professional victory.
Montgomerie was trying for a record-tying sixth victory of the season on the tour. He led by three strokes at the start of the round but had three straight bogeys beginning at No. 4 and finished at 71.
May, playing with Montgomerie, closed with a 5-under 67 to finish at 19-under 269. His best previous finish was a tie for third at the Scandinavian Masters five weeks ago.
LPGA: At Maple Grove, Minn., Se Ri Pak rallied from a four-stroke deficit to win the Samsung World Championship of Women's Golf as Karrie Webb double-bogeyed two of the last four holes.
Pak closed with a par round of 72 for an 8-under 280 total, one stroke better than Webb who had a 2-over 74 in the final round at Rush Creek Golf Club.
Webb, who started the final round with a one-stroke lead over Pak and Laura Davies, nearly rebounded from her first disaster, the double bogey at 15, but she missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the next hole as Pak was bogeying No. 17.
In her bid to become the first player since Beth Daniel in 1990 to win seven tournaments in a year, Webb self-destructed on the final hole.
Her third shot on the 530-yard par-5 found a greenside bunker. She hit out about 3 feet short of the green.
After chipping onto the green, she barely missed a 6-foot bogey putt.
WALKER CUP: At Nairn, Scotland, Britain and Ireland surged back to defeat the United States and capture the Walker Cup. The British-Irish team won 10 of 12 possible points on the final day, resulting in a record 15-9 victory.
It was only the fifth victory in 77 years for Britain-Ireland in amateur golf's most prestigious event, but it also marked three wins in the past six attempts.
This was Britain-Ireland's biggest victory, an improbable comeback from a 7-5 deficit after Saturday.
This victory was the latest by international golf teams over the once indomitable United States. In the Ryder Cup, Americans have won only two of the past seven.
In the women's amateur Curtis Cup, the United States has two victories in the past seven. Only the women's professional Solheim Cup gives the United States a recent edge with three straight wins.