BURNHAM & Berrow golf pro Lee Corfield remained cool at sun-baked Farleigh Golf Club to join the likes of Tony Jacklin and Peter Alliss as winners of The PGA’s Assistants’ Championship.

His margin of victory in the £32,000 Birdietime-supported competition was two shots but that does not reflect the intensity of a duel with James Watts that lasted until the 17th hole.

Watts, who set off on the third and final round two pairings ahead of Corfield and four shots adrift of him, chipped away at the tournament leader’s advantage.

By the the time Corfield reached the turn Watts had trimmed his lead to one. And when the pursuer birdied the 16th the pair were level.

But then disaster befell the challenger from Kingsway Golf Centre in Hertfordshire. A triple bogey at the par-four 17th left Corfield knowing what he had to do to claim the £5,000 first prize.

Having opted for caution off the tee to avoid dunking his ball in the rough which he and other competitors described as ‘penal’, he arrived at the 18th green with the comfort of having four putts for victory.

He needed three, the ball defiantly perching on the hole’s rim following the second and forcing him to tap it home.

All of which added up to a one-under-par round of 71 and a 54-hole seven-under-par score of 209 for the Assistant pro who is yet to embark on his PGA training.

Reflecting on his victory, he said: “I’m very proud to win this trophy - there are some very famous names on there.

“This was my first Assistants’ event so I’m delighted to win it. I start my PGA course in October so I’ve got another three goes at this!”

There were times when the course on the cusp of the leafy Surrey suburbs, parched by the unrelenting sun, behaved like his home club.

“The greens here are wonderful, like they are at Burnham,” he added. “But if you get out of line you have to run one in from a little bit short. And the rough was penal, which is similar to Burnham as well.”