Lonard and O’Hern lead by two from another Australian Brett Rumford, Scotland’s Stephen Gallacher and England’s Simon Wakefield with six players a further stroke back including former Masters and Open Champion Sandy Lyle and the leading Irish challenger Peter Lawrie. It was the first time Lonard had seen the stunning links at Baltray, his arrival delayed until Wednesday evening after a stop-off in London for a touch up on some laser surgery he had to his eyes six years ago. Although having not set eyes on the course before, Lonard enjoyed a breathtaking day on the greens to convert seven birdies and an eagle, his only dropped shot coming at the tenth, his first hole. “I suppose when it is your day, it is your day,” said Lonard, who is chasing his first European Tour title after seven other tournament victories worldwide. “The course is fantastic. I didn’t know what to expect. I got here last night, so first look around I thought it was the greatest course I have ever played. It’s a good links course.” When Lonard received treatment on Tuesday it was 50-50 whether he would be able to play but with no complications felt confident enough to play and reaped the rewards. The early starters took advantage of the relatively benign conditions to post some exceptional scores for the first round. Moments after Lonard established a new course record, the in-form O’Hern joined him at the top of the leaderboard. The left hander has recorded four top ten finishes in his last five outings, including a run of fourth, third, second from The Celtic Manor Wales Open, and bounced back from the disappointment of narrowly missing out on a place in last week’s Open Golf Championship is spectacular fashion. Like Lonard he picked up seven birdies and an eagle with just one dropped shot on the 12th, his third, relishing in the challenges posed by one of the world’s great links courses. Gallacher, Rumford and Wakefield all posted rounds of 66 to lie just two shots off the pace while Lyle showed signs of a return to form with a fine opening 67. Lyle is enjoying a return to form having quickened his backswing over the last four or five weeks in order to get more fluidity in his swing. With the improved ball striking has come renewed confidence and now his sights are set on another European Tour title to add to his previous 18 victories, the first pf which dates back to 1979. There were also two holes in one during the opening round from two Spaniards – Santiago Luna holing a five iron on the fifth hole, unfortunately not on the prize hole, while Jose Manuel Carrilles aced the 15th with the same club to win the new state-of-the-art Nissan Murano, valued at €63,000 and not available in Ireland until next year. Commenting on the achievement, Gerard O’Toole, Executive Chairman, Nissan Ireland, said: “We are delighted to present the Nissan Murano to Jose Manuel for his tremendous achievement today. This is an exceptional car with a high level of quality and design, so it is fitting that it would be presented to a player like Jose Manuel with the same standards in his game.” http://www.europeantour.com/ |