DP World Tour : KLM Open Leaderboard
Eugenio Chacarra has won the KLM Open 69 69 65 70 -11.
He edged Finland's Oliver Lindell 69 67 69 69 -10 by a stroke.
Bryan Angus
EDIT >>>>>>
Eugenio Chacarra birdied the 18th hole on Sunday to win the 2026 KLM Open by one stroke.
Oliver Lindell had put the pressure on the long-time leader as a round of 69, capped by a birdie of his own, took him alongside Chacarra at -10
But the Spaniard responded in kind with an excellent approach setting up a two-putt from around 20 feet to seal the crown at The International in Amsterdam.
"Shot of my career, maybe!" he said of the approach.
"That was a little 'tweener' but with adrenaline I'm going to try to hit this one hard, it flew 10-15 longer than we thought. So, proud to see the ball land on the green and then took a nice first putt to give me a putt that you always dream of, a putt that you can't really miss to win a tournament."
Chacarra went desperately close to a virtual clinching birdie at the 17th, which would have been only the fifth of the day on that hole, and Lindell asked the question with a closing birdie to move alongside him at the summit as the Spaniard prepared to hit his approach shot.
He duly found the back of the green and ran his first putt down close to the pin, taking deep breaths as his playing partners finished up before the tap-in to clinch his second DP World Tour win, after last year's Hero Indian Open.
"It's nice to win with my dad here. He's given everything for me since I was little so it was something very unique and I think of him, for sure."
Chacarra spoke after Saturday's round of how he relishes tough conditions and Sunday in Amsterdam certainly delivered, with high winds throughout.
The low round of the day was just a -3 68 from Marcel Siem, while only eight players shot in the 60s.
Lindell, who birdied three of the last four holes and has made the cut in all 16 of his DP World Tour starts this season, was left to settle for second on his own while Angel Ayora eagled the last to join Steinlechner, Söderberg and Joe Dean in third at -8
Julien Guerrier and Danny Willett were a further shot back at -7 with the top ten completed by Yanhan Zhou at -6 and Lindell's fellow Finn Sami Välimäki at -5
europeantour.com
Bryan Angus (edit)