You could argue there is no golfer on the European Tour playing with more pressure this season than Alexander Levy. At 66th entering last week’s Trophee Hassan II in Morocco, the 27-year-old is the top-ranked Frenchman in the world. And with the Ryder Cup being held outside Paris this September, the hope that he can represent the country on the European team as it hosts the biennial event for the first time means Levy has plenty riding on his play the next few months.

Given all this, Levy’s two-under 70 overnight in the final round at Golf Dar Es Salam, good enough for an eight-under 280 total and a one-stroke victory over Alvaro Quiros, is as meaningful a victory as any to date this season.

“This feels so good,” Levy said after the round. “I’m a little bit tired now because it was really tough today, but I did a really good job today. For me, I played an amazing game. I’m so happy to win this trophy.”

Levy started the day, and made his first birdie on the third hole, a five-footer that grabbed him a share of the lead. Another birdie on the par-5 fifth put him out front alone. As Quiros and others chased him, Levy made a series of clutch par saves to remain in front.

The shot of the day for Levy came on the par-3 17th, where he hit his tee shot to four feet on a hole that had given up only five birdies at the time. He converted the putt to give him a two-stroke edge. Quiros, who birdied 17 as well, needed eagle on the par-5 18th to force a playoff but could manage only a birdie.

Alexander Levy

It was Levy’s fifth career European Tour win (he trails only Thomas Levet’s six for most wins by a French player in tour history), and builds off momentum that he has generated so far in 2018, with three top-10 finishes in five previous starts. However, Levy is not quite ready to feel comfortable about a Ryder Cup spot.

“Like what I said from the start of the season, I need to improve my game,” Levy said. “I need to work a lot. I worked a lot the past two days, two weeks, and I won this trophy.”

The victory, however, comes at an ideal time as Levy heads to Asia for this week’s Volvo China Open, where he is a two-time winner and the defending champion.

“It’s a good win, but I need to go back to work because we can see we have a lot of good players in Europe,” Levy said. “So it will be tough to make it.”

And yet Levy is slowly finding himself in position to be a legitimate choice for the squad. And it can’t hurt to see this kind of tweet from European Ryder Cup captain Thomas Bjorn: