Jeunghun Wang made it back-to-back European Tour wins as he came out on top in a final day battle with Siddikur Rahman to claim the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open.
Siddikur came into the final day with a one-shot lead over Wang and had extended that to three as he stood on the 16th tee, but he dropped three shots in two holes to leave the duo going up the last locked together on five under.
A birdie for Wang after a brilliant bunker shot then handed the South Korean a one-shot victory, just seven days after he won his maiden title at the Trophée Hassan II in Morocco.
The 20 year old required a birdie on the last at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam to get into a play-off in Morocco, but when Siddikur missed his effort after an excellent chip which hit the pin, one was enough to hand Wang a triumph in the Indian Ocean.
The win made Wang the first player to win in consecutive weeks since Rory McIlroy claimed the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational followed by the US PGA Championship in 2014 and he also became the first Asian player to win in consecutive weeks.
"I probably had luck on my side today," Wang said. "I wasn't even thinking about winning this week until the 16th. I missed a lot of putts so I thought I didn't have any chance to win.
Wang and Siddikur were the only two players to finish under par after a tough week for scoring at Four Seasons Golf Club at Anahita, with Nicolas Colsaerts and Estanislao Goya at level par, a shot clear of Andrew Dodt.
Both men made early bogeys but a beautiful tee shot on the par three fifth handed the Bangladeshi a birdie and when he put his approach to the sixth to 18 feet and holed an excellent putt, the lead was three.
Playing partner Wang needed three shots to find the green after his tee shot ended up on an awkward slope and when he missed his par putt, the two-shot swing put Siddikur firmly in control.
Wang then used his length advantage over Siddikur to drive over the ninth green and make a birdie and when the latter missed a short putt on the 12th, the pressure was building for the last six holes.
A three-putt bogey from Wang followed on the 14th, but Siddikur lost his ball off the 16th tee and a double-bogey followed before a three-putt on the 17th set up the late drama.