"He was over the moon when he saw Jack,"
Senden said.
Senden's good friend and fellow Aussie Steven Bowditch came up with an idea for tour professionals to show their support.
It carried him to sevenunder 137, three ahead of Australian John
Senden, 42, who earned his Masters berth only by winning the Valspar Championships four weeks ago.
According to News.com.au,
Senden was two-over on his round through 13 holes to drop to two-under-par for the week while defending champion Scott was five-over through 14 to be two-over.
Senden, two shots behind going into the final round, closed with a 1-under 70 for his first PGA Tour win since the 2006 John Deere Classic.
Senden will be familiar with those, while he also performs well on courses where accuracy is key, so he's an each-way punt in my book.
It was a rollercoaster round for
Senden, who posted five bogeys and four birdies in the worst of the testing afternoon conditions en route to a disappointing one-over 73.
He sits one clear of a group of six that includes Steven Jones (68) and Englishman Justin Rose, who matched
Senden's one-over 73.
Ian Poulter was the second player to win, seeing off John
Senden 3&2.