Golf

Sport24.co.za | China's Li leads Shanghai WGC to fuel home hopes



Shanghai – A
last-minute switch back to his old clubs helped China’s  Li Haotong
find his groove and delight a home crowd by charging to the first-round
lead in the WGC-HSBC Championships in Shanghai on Thursday.

China’s highest-ranked male golfer and its first-ever President’s Cup
selection, Li’s eight-under-par 64 also made him the first Chinese
player to hold a lead after any round in a World Golf Championships
event.

It was Li’s best performance yet after 24 previous rounds in Asia’s
premiere golf event, which offers a big purse and attracts a
high-powered field.

Li, known as much for his quick smile as for a fast-improving game,
has emerged as China’s best hope for a long-awaited break into the top
ranks of the men’s game, and he looked it in Shanghai. 

Playing alongside one of his idols, Phil Mickelson, the world No
59 didn’t drop a shot on his front nine and cruised home to a one-shot
lead at Sheshan International Golf Club.

A posse of golfers including former Masters champion Adam Scott of
Australia and last year’s winner in Shanghai, Xander Schauffele, were
two strokes back of Li.

Li, 24, became the first Chinese male golfer to break into the world top 50 a year ago, and is seeking his first PGA Tour win.

“Obviously it would be great joy for Chinese golfers and golf fans to
have a Chinese player winning a WGC-HSBC Champions here in China, but
for the next three days, anything could happen,” he said afterward.

Li switched back to an older set of clubs just before the tournament after failing to gel with some new irons.

“I (didn’t) feel good with my new irons, and I actually had to change
back to my old clubs this week to feel more comfortable in my own swing
and putting,” said Li.

China has long been viewed as the next frontier for golf talent, but
that vision has been slow to materialise – at least in the men’s game.

But Li heads a cadre of emerging young golfers providing new hope,
and a win in east Asia’s biggest event would be a major step forward.

Reigning champ Schauffele looked potent as well, despite suffering from bad flu.

The American led the field in birdies on Thursday with nine for a six-under-par 66.

“Maybe I should just keep my flu going and if I can rattle off a 66 every day, I think that would be enough,” Schauffele said.

“I think a couple more nights of sleep, I’ll be in better shape. But it was a dream start with what things were looking like.”

World number two Rory McIlroy said this week his sights were set on
regaining the world’s top ranking that he held four years ago, possibly
next year, but it didn’t go well for him early.

His front nine was marred by three bogeys as he struggled to gain
momentum, but a quintet of birdies down the stretch kept him well within
contention.

The event features 15 past Major winners including Justin Rose, Bubba
Watson, Sergio Garcia and Jordan Spieth, but top-ranked Brooks Koepka
and a resurgent Tiger Woods skipped it.

The WGC-HSBC Champions has a purse of $10.25 million, with $1.7
million going to the winner, and is the third and final leg of the PGA
Tour’s Asian swing.

Leading first-round scores on Thursday in the WGC-HSBC Champions at Sheshan International Golf Club in Shanghai, China (par 72):

64 – Li Haotong (CHN)

65 – Victor Perez (FRA)

66 – Im Sung-jae (KOR), Adam Scott (AUS), Matthew Fitzpatrick (ENG), Xander Schauffele (USA)

67 – Corey Conners (CAN), Matthias Schwab (AUT), Rory McIlroy (NIR)

68 – Zhang Xinjun (CHN), Louis Oosthuizen (RSA), Danny Willett (ENG), Abraham Ancer (MEX)

69 – Matthew Millar (AUS), Jason Kokrak (USA), Yuan Yechun (CHN), An Byeong-hun (KOR), Ryo Ishikawa (JPN), Chez Reavie (USA), J.T. Poston (USA), Matt Wallace (ENG), Billy Horschel (USA), Tony Finau (USA), Christiaan Bezuidenhout (RSA), Justin Rose (ENG)





READ NEWS SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.