BANGKOK, Thailand – Branden Grace, the closest pursuer to Dustin Johnson in LIV Golf’s season-long Individual Champion race, realizes he has plenty of ground to make up in the final two weeks of the regular season.
He took the first big step Friday at LIV Golf Invitational
Bangkok.
The South African, the winner in Portland earlier this season,
shot a 7-under 65 at Stonehill to grab a share of the first-round lead with
England’s Richard Bland and Spain’s Eugenio Chacarra. Meanwhile, Johnson is in
a tie for 21st after shooting a 70, prompting him to head to the range
post-round.
The 4 Aces GC captain, who has a 39-point lead over Grace in the individual standings, can wrap up the title and the $18 million prize by winning in Bangkok. But Grace would rather take care of business this week and make things interesting in the final regular-season event in Jeddah. With 40 points to the winner, Grace could theoretically move ahead of Johnson with a victory this week, provided Johnson does not finish in the top 24.
“I’m just trying to win a golf tournament,” said Grace, a member
of the all-South African Stinger GC. “If I can do that, if I can keep my mind
toward that, then the rest will happen. I’m just fortunate to be in a good
position coming into this week, lying second and playing well and feeling good
about the game. I just need to come out here and hit the shots and make the
most of it.”
As for Bland and Chacarra, they are at opposite ends of the
spectrum in regards to their professional experience, but they now share the
same goal – build on their first-round 65s and give the top of the leaderboard
some new names this weekend. That goes for both the individual and team
competition, as Chacarra’s Fireballs GC leads the team standings at 14 under,
followed by Bland’s Cleeks GC at 13 under.
Iron Heads GC, which includes Thai golfers Sadom Kaewkanjana and
Phachara Khongwatmai, are in solo third at 11 under. Four teams are another
stroke back, while 4 Aces GC – winners of four consecutive events – are in
unfamiliar territory at 10th.
The 49-year-old Bland, whose first win on a major tour came in his 478th career start, is not known for his length. But on a course that measures 7,815 yards and was expected to favor the bombers, he shot a bogey-free round while finishing with three birdies in his last four holes.
“They put a few of the tees up, and a couple of the stronger par
4s played downwind, which was favorable for me because I’m not one of the long
hitters,” said Bland, whose best result in his first five LIV Golf starts was
17th in London. “You couldn’t design a better course for Bryson [DeChambeau],
really.
“But we’re all good players. And obviously because the fairways
are so wide, once you’ve got irons in your hands and the greens are quite soft,
guys are going to shoot good scores, no matter where you are.”
At 22 years old, Chacarra is the youngest player in this week’s
field. He was the world’s No. 2 amateur before turning pro earlier this year to
become a LIV Golf member. He’s still looking for his first top 20 finish,
although his Fireballs GC has finished in the money twice since he joined
captain Sergio Garcia’s team.
“I’m living the dream,” Chacarra said. “I’m playing with Sergio’s
team. He’s my hero since I was little, and then I got Abraham [Ancer] and Carlo
[Ortiz] that are really good friends, and they are helping me as much as they
can every week.
“I didn’t play very good the first four weeks and I didn’t help
much, so I like helping them and giving them the trust they put on me to be on
their team.”
Marc Leishman (Punch GC) and Ian Poulter (Majesticks GC) are tied
for fourth, one stroke off the lead after shooting 66. The five-way tie for
sixth includes Smash GC captain Brooks Koepka, Niblicks GC’s Harold Varner III,
Torque GC’s Jediah Morgan and two members of Iron Heads GC – Sihwan Kim
and captain Kevin Na.
Punch GC captain Cameron Smith, the most recent LIV Golf winner,
shot an even-par 72 and is tied for 41st.
TEAM LEADERBOARD
In addition to the individual stroke-play competition, players are
also competing as four-man teams during LIV Golf events. Starting with LIV Golf
Invitational Bangkok, the best three scores in Round 1, the best three scores
in Round 2, and the best three scores in Round 3 will combine to produce the
team score. The previous counting-score
format was 2-2-3.
“I think 3-3-3 is just better,” said Sihwan Kim, whose Iron Heads
GC are in solo third after Friday. “Makes it more exciting for the teams.”
The total team prize money for each event is $5 million, with the
winning team dividing $3 million, second place dividing $1.5 million and third
place dividing $500,000 among its four team members.
In addition, teams are vying for seeds going into the Team
Championship in Miami, the final event of the inaugural season with a $50
million purse. Teams have received points for their finishes in each event, and
the top four teams in the points standings after next week’s event in Jeddah
receive day one byes in Miami.
Here is the leaderboard and Friday’s counting scores in the first round at Stonehill:
1. Fireballs GC, 14 under (Eugenio Chacarra 6,
Sergio Garcia 68, Abraham Ancer 69)
2. Cleeks GC, 13 under (Richard Bland 65, Graeme McDowell
68, Laurie Canter 70)
3. Iron Heads GC, 11 under (Kevin Na 67, Sihwan Kim 67, Phachara
Khongwatmai 71)
T-4. Stinger GC, 10 under (Branden Grace 65, Charl Schwartzel
70, Shaun Norris, 71)
T-4 Niblicks GC, 10 under (Harold Varner III 67, James Piot 69,
Hudson Swafford 70)
T-4. Majesticks GC, 10 under (Ian Poulter 66, Lee Westwood 69,
Henrik Stenson 71)
T-4. Smash GC, 10 under (Brooks Koepka 67, Jason Kokrak 69,
Peter Uihlein 70)
T-8. Torque GC, 9 under (Jediah Morgan 67, Scott Vincent 70,
Hideto Tanihara 70)
T-8. Punch GC, 9 under (Marc Leishman 66, Wade Ormsby 70,
Matt Jones 71)
10. 4 Aces GC, 8 under (Patrick Reed 68, Talor Gooch 70,
Dustin Johnson 70)
11. Crushers GC, 7 under (Bryson DeChambeau 69, Charles Howell
III 69, Paul Casey 71)
12. Hy Flyers GC, 4 under (Phil Mickelson 69, Cameron Tringale
70, Bernd Wiesberger 73)
PLAYER QUOTEBOARD
Bryson DeChambeau (on Official World Golf Ranking’s latest
response): “They’re delaying the inevitable. We’ve hit every mark in their
criteria, so for us not to get points is kind of crazy with having the top – at
least I believe we have the top players in the world. Not all of them but we
certainly believe that there’s enough that are in the top 50, and we deserve to
be getting world ranking points.”
Brooks Koepka (on the OWGR): “I don’t think it really was much of a
response. I just hate when you sit on the fence. Just pick a side. … If it’s
yes, if it’s no, it’s fine. We’ll figure it out from there.”
Branden Grace (on three counting rounds): “We
struggled beating [the 4 Aces] with two rounds to count. Now with three to
count, maybe we can give them a run for the money.”
PERFORMANCE STATS
Driving accuracy – Ian Poulter, Kevin Na, Graeme McDowell,
James Piot, Peter Uihlein, Carlos Ortiz, 100% (14 of 14 fairways)
Driving distance – Bryson DeChambeau, 352.1-yard average
Greens in regulation – Sihwan Kim, 100% (18 of 18 greens)
Fewest putts – Branden Grace, Kevin Na, 24 putts
Most birdies – Ian Poulter, 8
HOLE STATS
Easiest hole – 584-yard par-5 6th, which played to a stroke
average of 4.458.
Hardest hole – 484-yard par-4 8th, which played to a
stroke average of 4.104, and the 177-yard par-3 16th, which played to a stroke
average of 3.104.
Course stroke average: Rd. 1 (69.625). Par is 72.
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