Guan slips back after early birdies

By Agencies – Global Times Source:Agencies - Global Times Published: 2013-12-5 23:28:01

China's Guan Tianlang plays during the first round of the Hong Kong Open golf tournament on Thursday. Photo: CFP

China's Guan Tianlang plays during the first round of the Hong Kong Open golf tournament on Thursday. Photo: CFP



China's teenage golf prodigy Guan Tianlang blew a sensational start to the Hong Kong Open on Thursday, collapsing to a one-over-par 71 after five early birdies.

The 15-year-old amateur performed flawlessly in his opening 13 holes but was undone by three consecutive bogeys before a costly triple-bogey on the ninth, the penultimate hole of his first round.

Guan, who caused a stir at the US Masters this year when he became the youngest player to make the cut in a major, said he was disappointed with his finish but still confident for the rest of the tournament.

"I was playing really well the first 12 holes. I made a lot of birdies and gave myself a lot of opportunities," the Guangzhou schoolboy said.

"After that I was really not feeling comfortable with my swing and I drove a couple in the rough."

Guan opened his bid for glory at the par-70 Hong Kong Golf Club in Fanling on the 11th hole and ­quickly charged up the leader board.

He birdied the par-three 12th and followed it up immediately with a birdie four on 13. He then made further birdies on the 17th and 18th, the latter being one of the toughest holes on the course.

Guan scored a second two of the day on hole No.2 and consolidated his spot at the top of the leader board on five under with three pars before his round took a turn for the worse.

Bogeys at the sixth, ­seventh and eighth saw him drop off the pace while a triple-bogey seven at the par-four ninth put him at one over.

Guan said he was "a ­little bit" disappointed, adding, "But that's golf. These things happen sometimes.

"It's still all right for me and I'm looking forward to tomorrow. I'm still feeling pretty good."

Defending champion Miguel Angel Jimenez, 34 years older than Guan, is the favorite to win the event, co-sanctioned by the European Tour and Asian Tour, which is missing its usual star names as it clashes with two other tournaments.

But he has a lot of work to do if he is to clinch a record-equaling fourth Hong Kong Open after a disappointing opening round on Thursday. The Spanish ­veteran signed for a ­level-par 70, six strokes ­behind the early ­leader, journeyman David ­Higgins of Ireland.

Higgins' 64 leaves him one shot clear of Italy's ­Andrea Pavan going into Friday's second round.

Agencies - Global Times

Posted in: Golf

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