The Indian trio of Shubhankar Sharma, Gaganjeet Bhullar and SSP Chawrasia on Thursday failed to capitalise on the perfect scoring conditions as they made a stuttering start on Day One of the ASI Scottish Open.
Sharma, who seemed to be getting along fine at two-under, finished bogey-bogey to card even par 71 and T-114, while Gaganjeet Bhullar was one-over through 11 holes and SSP Chawrasia was also one-over with only three holes left.
The first day efforts left the Indians with a lot of work to do in the second round as the excellent conditions at the Renaissance Club led to a string of excellent low scores.
No less than four players -- Englishman Andy Sullivan, Scotsman Jamie Donaldson, Finn Kalle Samooja and South African Thomas Aiken finished their first round at seven-under.
Three others, England’s Lee Slattery, Italian Nino Bertasio and Frenchman Romain Wattel were also seven under.
Slattery had one hole to go, Bertasio had four and Wattel had two left.
Matt Kuchar, winner of Hero Challenge, was six-under through 14 holes, and looked set to challenge for leadership, while top draw Rory McIlroy was three-under through 12.
Twenty six players were five-under or better.
Sharma, the first of the three Indians to tee off, birdied the Par-5 16th and parred the rest of the back nine but saw a lot of action on the second nine. He bogeyed the second, birdied par-3 fifth and Par-5 seventh, but then dropped a shot each on the eighth, which was probably the toughest hole on the course, and the ninth.
“I hit a flyer on eighth and on ninth, a longish (199-yard) Par-3 I missed the green and did not make the up-and-down,” said Sharma.
Donaldson and Samooja were bogey free and Samooja had an ace to celebrate, too, on the Par-3 15th.
Sullivan eagled Par-5 16th, and his only dropped shot came on Par-4 eighth. Tenth tee starter Aiken was eight-under through 16 holes but bogeyed Par-4 eighth and parred the last to finish at 64.
Winner of The Open in 2016, Sweden’s Henrik Stenson called the day’s golf as ‘target golf’
Stenson, former World No. 2, is now coming back after dropping to 44th due to an injury break. With two Top-10 in last two starts, including US Open, he is looking good.
ALSO READ: Olympic quota holders to take part in invitation-only Sardar Sajjan Singh Sethi Masters Championship
The top Asian Tour player was David Lipsky at five-under through 16, while Korea’s Wang Jeunghun, Japan’s Masahiro Kawamura and Malaysia’s Gavin Green, had all shot five-under 67 each to get off to a solid start and were T-27.
Thongchai Jaidee carded 69 to be T-71 and Kiradech Aphibarnrat (71) was 114th alongside Sharma.
- Solid start for Atwal, Lahiri two-over -
Arjun Atwal continued his fine show as he moved to three-under through 15 holes on the first day of the John Deere Classic on Thursday.
Atwal, 46, overcame a double bogey as he compiled six birdies, one double and one bogey and had two more holes to play.
Anirban Lahiri did not have a pleasing day as he was two-over through 16 holes, but on the other side of the course, as he started from the first. He bogeyed sixth and 10th and had no birdies.
Last week Atwal made the 3M Open by winning a Monday qualifier and then finished T-23 after being in Top-10 for three days.
Atwal started from the tenth and birdied the 11th but gave back that shot on 13th, where he missed a five-footer for par.
Soon after he was then hit by a double bogey when he went from right rough to left greenside bunker and from there to the greenside right bunker. It was a difficult shot and he was left with 24-footer for bogey, which he missed.
ALSO READ: Indian shooting team reaches Suhl for Junior World Cup
However after that he played brilliantly with three birdies in a row from 16th to 18th and each time he had a great approach shot. He turned in one-under and added to that with birdies on second and fifth to go three-under. He holed a clutch par from 10 feet on seventh, his 16th holes.
Scotsman Martin Laird was the leader at seven-under, but he still had two more holes to play, while Andrew Landry and Austin Cook were both six under after 15 holes, but on opposite sides of the course.
Cook was helped by an eagle-two on par-4 where he holed his second shot from 137 yards.
Last week’s winner, Matt Wolff was three-under through while Viktor Hovland and Colin Morikawa, two other young prodigies were two-under each through 10 holes.
Comments
Follow Us
SHARE