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Kevin Kisner leads as Spieth stumbles in 1st round

Kevin Kisner of the United States surged to the top of the early British Open leaderboard on Thursday.

Carnoustie (United Kingdom): Kevin Kisner of the United States surged to the top of the early British Open leaderboard on Thursday as Jordan Spieth’s defence of the Claret Jug got off to an inauspicious start at Carnoustie.

Kisner went out in one of the first groups and had an eagle and four birdies in his five-under-par round of 66 on a perfect summer’s morning on Scotland’s east coast.

“The golf course is great for me. The conditions have been fine,” said the 34-year-old, who led going into the final round of last year’s US PGA Championship before dropping away to finish tied for seventh.

“Going forward, you never know what you’re going to have in Scotland. I know the rain is coming in tomorrow. I don’t think the rain is going to affect how the golf course is playing in one day, but I have to just keep doing what I’m doing.”

Americans have won the last five majors and will take some beating this week, with Spieth, world number one Dustin Johnson and Tiger Woods all hoping to be in contention.

However, a poor end to his first round saw Spieth finish the day one over par after a 72. He went to the 15th tee three-under, only to drop three shots on the next two holes. He then drove into the Barry Burn on the 18th, and ended with another bogey.
“It felt like a missed opportunity. I felt like I was really going well,” said the Texan, who hopes that a turn for the worse in the weather forecast for Friday will spark an upturn in his fortunes.

“I think I’m certainly in a recoverable situation. I mean, I imagine this is as easy as the course could play. So I don’t see the winning score being any better than it was in 2007 with tomorrow’s forecasted tough conditions and Sunday’s forecasted heavy winds.”

South Africans start strongly
Trailing Kisner by one shot in the clubhouse were his compatriot Tony Finau and South African duo Zander Lombard and Erik van Rooyen, with the latter taking advantage of the ideal summer weather on his Open debut.

Van Rooyen went out in the second group of the day at 6:46am and shot 67, the only flaw on his scorecard coming with a bogey at the last, the hole that was the scene of Frenchman Jean Van de Velde’s infamous final-day meltdown in 1999.
However, it was still a fine start for the 28-year-old, who qualified for his first British Open by coming second at the Joburg Open.

“It was playing as easy as it was going to play this whole week this morning, no wind at all. I think it’s going to pick up from now onwards. So you had to go out and take advantage of it,” said Van Rooyen, whose compatriot Brandon Stone shot a three-under 68.

‘Birdie-free’ start for Lahiri
Anirban Lahiri finished the first day completely starved of any birdies as he carded a 5-over 76 that left him a huge hill to climb to make the weekend rounds.
Lahiri, putting on a brave smile, said, “It was not the day I was hoping for. I didn’t get off to a good start and after 2-3 holes in I started tightening up and had a ‘birdie free’ round. That’s not the phrase I want to be associated with, but that’s what it was. I missed a lot of shots to the right and that’s not what I do usually. I missed a lot of opportunity early on and didn’t take advantage of the two par-5s and I found too many fairway bunkers.” Shubhankar Sharma had just teed off and parred the first hole while playing with Sergio Garcia and Bryson De Chambeau.

( Source : Agencies )
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