England's Richard Mansell claimed his maiden DP World Tour title after finishing with a brilliant birdie to earn a one-shot victory at the weather-shortened Porsche Singapore Classic.
With the tournament reduced to 54 holes following Thursday's washout, Mansell went into the third and final round one shot off the lead on ten under par.
But he soon hit the front after following up three opening pars with five birdies in a row from the fourth hole at Laguna National Golf Resort Club, heading to the turn with a two-shot lead.
And although he was joined at the top on the back nine, Mansell saved his best until last, two-putting from over 100 feet for a birdie at the 18th to sign for a closing 66 and finish the tournament on 16 under par, one ahead of early clubhouse leader Keita Nakajima.
Nakajima made seven birdies in a spotless 65 to surge into contention but was denied a play-off by Mansell's heroics at the last.
The Japanese 24-year-old finished alone in second spot on 15 under, one ahead of Tom McKibbin and Adrien Saddier in a tie for third.
Mansell got his first birdie of the day with a fine 25-foot putt on the fourth green to get within one shot of the lead.
The 29-year-old then followed that up with an eight-foot birdie on the fifth before holing from close range at the sixth for a hat-trick of birdies and a share of the lead.
Mansell kept the momentum going at the par-three seventh as he sent his tee-shot to within five feet before rolling in the putt to sit alone at the top of the leaderboard.
And his putting masterclass continued at the eighth as he holed his long-range birdie try from the fringe to reach 15 under par and move two shots clear at the summit.
Mansell's first bogey of the day arrived at the tenth after he got into bunker trouble there, and he was soon caught at the top by Nakajima.
But the Englishman managed to bounce back with a 15-foot birdie on the long 13th to regain the outright lead.
Mansell had a wonderful chance to extend his advantage at the 15th after spinning his approach shot back to around five feet but he could not convert the birdie putt.
He then demonstrated his battling qualities with a fine recovery after his tee-shot on the 16th found the rough, saving par to remain one clear.
But he was joined at the top by Nakajima once more after he finished his round with a stunning two-putt birdie from over 100 feet.
Mansell too finished with a flourish, though, also finding the edge of the enormous 18th green before draining his clutch six-foot putt to reach 16 under and win the tournament in his first week working with new caddie David Kenny.
He said: "What a feeling. Just to get into that position, and I played so well today.
"First week with a new caddie so that was a good start and he just, a couple of times got me to slow down.
"And it makes those near-misses and when I've got ahead of myself in the past just kind of worth it and it just means that much more.
"In 2022 I had quite a few close calls and didn't get it done. Looking back on it I probably should've kept doing what I was doing and it probably would've happened a lot sooner.
"But I went searching, I tried to change and I became quite good at pointing the finger, blaming other people why it hadn't happened.
"And I started just not enjoying it as much and I just got a little bit lost from where I'd actually come from.
"It's taken a lot of work these past six months. Ellie, my wife, has been so supportive. I've just had to really, really stay patient and forget everyone else and that was my main thing today, to focus on myself.
"Luckily I had an opportunity on the last hole to hole a putt for the win and I managed to do it.
"It's amazing. I've just been on the phone to my mum and dad and Ellie's parents. So many people have supported me and believed in me when I stopped doing it myself.
"One thing I'd say to people trying to do it as a career, that moment's the most fulfilling thing in the world and it's worth it.
"So stick in and hopefully you'll get rewarded one day like I have today."