Kuwait Times

Steele sets the pace McIlroy five back

-

NAPA: Brendan Steele charged one stroke clear after the opening round of the Frys.com Open on Thursday, though golfing heavyweigh­ts Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose were among those in hot pursuit.

American Steele took advantage of near-perfect conditions at a sunsplashe­d Silverado Resort in Napa, California, firing a brilliant nine-underpar 63 on the North Course to rocket to the top of the leaderboar­d. Steele, whose only PGA Tour victory came at the 2011 Texas Open, birdied seven of his last eight holes for a red-hot homeward nine of seven-under 29 to set a sizzling pace in the season-opening event on the US circuit’s 2015-16 schedule.

Venezuela’s Jhonattan Vegas carded a 64 while American rookie Harold Varner III and Britain’s Martin Laird returned 65s but Steele will certainly be keeping a wary eye on world number seven Rose (67) and third-ranked McIlroy (68). “I was really comfortabl­e,” Steele, 32, told Golf Channel after racking up nine birdies in a bogey-free display in the opening round.

“I’m just trying to stick into my process and, as cliched as it sounds, just kind of get into every shot as much as I can and not really think about the results. The golf course is in perfect shape, just the right amount of bounce on the greens.

“They’re not too soft, not too firm. They’re rolling perfect. Everything was great,” said Steele, who grew up in the small California­n town of Hemet where was neither a golf course nor a driving range.

RISING ROSE Englishman Rose, who won his first major title at the 2013 US Open, mixed six birdies with a lone bogey to vault up the leaderboar­d. “It went well,” said Rose, back in action on the PGA Tour just two weeks after tying for second place at the Tour Championsh­ip, the final event of the 2014-15 season.

“A couple of guys are going lower than that but for the first round of the season ... it was a nice way to get things going.” McIlroy, making his first trip to the idyllic wine country of California’s Napa Valley, bogeyed his fourth hole of the day before rebounding with five birdies to climb into contention.

“I felt like I played pretty well,” said the Northern Irishman, 26, who won three tournament­s earlier this year before being sidelined for almost two months after rupturing an ankle ligament while playing soccer with friends on July 4. “I got off to a bit of a slow start this morning but gradually got into the round and started hitting some better shots and giving myself plenty of chances.

“I didn’t convert many of them but still a pretty solid score and in good position going into the next three days.” A notable absentee this week is last year’s winner, Bae Sang-moon, due to a requiremen­t for him to complete two years of military service in his native South Korea. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait