| Johl
leads with opening 63 India's
Amandeep Johl found the shortest route around a short course on the opening day
of the Hong Kong Open. The
bearded 32-year-old, with his wife acting as caddy, set out towards a first victory
in nine years with a six-under-par 63 on a Hong Kong Club course playing to a
par 69. Four
players -- Welshman Stephen Dodd, Sweden's Henrik Nystrom, Zimbabwe's Tony Johnstone
and Mexico's Pablo Del Olmo -- are tied in second place at five under par. A
further nine players, among them Scotland's Dean Robertson, Sweden's Marten Orlander,
Frenchman Thomas Levet and South Africa's James Kingston are a shot further back
at four under par. Kingston
recorded the 2003 European Tour season's first albatross and the Asian Tour's
sixth ever albatross when he holed his seven wood second shot, from 220 yards
on the par five ninth hole. Kingston
also recorded an albatross on the Asian Tour in 2000. Johl
last tasted success when he won the 1993 Nepal Open and his best finish since
then has been a fifth in last year's Maekyung Open in Korea. He
began his round steadily moving to one under par through eight holes but jumped
to three under par when he eagled the ninth. Johl
then moved into top gear with birdies at the 10th, 11th, 13th and 14th holes where
he moved to seven under par before the 12-year tour pro bogeyed the 17th to fall
back to his eventual score of six under par. "I
tried hard today to keep out of my own way and battled hard as I am not used to
TV cameras following me around the course, said Johl. "It
is just so easy to lose your concentration because these guys are moving all over
the place." Nick
Faldo was pleased to birdie his last two holes in a round of 68. Faldo was competing
in Hong Kong for the first time since winning the 1990 Johnnie Walker Classic
here. "I
just hit a patch of bad shots and a had a few missed putts and paid the penalty,"
he said. "It was a nice way to finish with two birdies but the way the course
is, it's all pretty tricky." Jose
Maria Olazabal had raced to three under par with three straight birdies from his
second hole in the defence of his title. But
the Spaniard, who has won once since winning in Hong Kong 12 months ago, dropped
four shots in five holes mid round before ending with a birdie and an even par
69 total. Olazabal
won the event last year with a shot of the year down the last but was so far right
yesterday with his three wood on the same hole that his ball was nearly out-of-bounds.
"After birdying
three of the first four I got to the 18th or my ninth and everything then went
sour," he said. "I
hit a really bad shot at 18, three-putted the first, hit a bad tee shot at the
third that cost me a bogey, so after my ninth I just didn't hit the ball well
at all. "It's
a lot different course to the one I won on last year and it's a bit strange competing
on a par 69. "It's
the first time ever I have played on a par 69 course." Dodd
won the longest drive award last year with a booming 348-yard tee shot but his
mood after his opening round half mirrored the bleak weather. Dodd
was six under par playing the last but his drive kicked right off the fairway
to end up behind a tree leaving him no option but to chip out sideways on route
to a bogey and a round of 64. "I
played really well today and even though I dropped a shot at the last, the course
was there for the taking," said Dodd. Taiwan
teenager, Shih-Kai Lo, meanwhile, created history by becoming the youngest ever
player to compete in a European Tour event. The
13-year old high school student was followed on the first tee by a TV news crew
and photographers. Despite
the attention Lo parred his first two holes before taking a double bogey at his
third after putting a ball out of bounds before signing for a four over par 73.
But at age 13
years, nine months and eight days, Lo is 16 months and six days younger than Sergio
Garcia, the Tour's previous youngest when he stepped on to the first tee in the
1995 Turespana Open Mediterrana in Valencia. "That
is a surprise to be the youngest but it is more of an honour this week just to
play alongside the best players in Asia and Europe," said Lo. Lo
became the youngest player to contest an Asian Tour event when he competed in
the Taiwan Open earlier this year.
Email
this page to a friend | Return
to top of page |