Major winner Keegan Bradley forged a two stroke lead at the HSBC Champions in Shanghai yesterday as he sought to cap a remarkable first professional season by winning the coveted title.
The rookie American carded two eagles and three birdies as he charged to a first round seven-under-par 65 after teeing off in a formidable group comprising England’s world No. 2 Lee Westwood and Australian powerhouse Adam Scott.
The 21-year-old Bradley — winner of the Byron Nelson Championship and the PGA Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club — said he was in awe of his group, but managed to maintain his nerves to carve a gap between compatriot Bo Van Pelt and Sweden’s Alexander Noren and Fredrik Jacobson, all tied second on five-under-67.
PHOTO: AFP
“To think a year after picking up my PGA card that I would be in a group with Lee and Adam is a dream come true. I am amazed at who I’m around,” said Bradley, who also claimed victory in the Bermudan PGA Grand Slam of Golf.
“I’m just very proud of the way I played. To play like that in the first round in a tournament like that on this course is very rewarding and means a lot to me,” he added.
Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee and Korean veteran K.J. Choi kept regional flags flying in Asia’s biggest golf tournament and are tied fifth with the US’ David Toms and Englishman Justin Rose on four-under.
Exactly a year ago, Westwood took away the No. 1 ranking from long-term summit resident Tiger Woods.
He then narrowly lost last year’s HSBC Champions by one shot to Italy’s Francesco Molinari in an enthralling play-off.
And 12 months on, the 38-year-old lies tied ninth on three-under-par after three bogeys lessened the impact of an eagle and four birdies.
Defending champion Molinari is seeking a re-run of his thrilling title win and sunk seven birdies to lie tied 18th.
Bradley’s fellow major winners this year, South African Charl Schwartzel and Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy, are also lying joint 18th after first rounds of 70.
The 22-year-old US Open champion bogeyed the 10th hole and carded two birdies in the light drizzle at the Sheshan International Golf Club.
“70 isn’t a disastrous start and something I can definitely build on,” McIlroy said.
World No. 1 Luke Donald pulled out of the US$7 million tournament last week to be with his wife for the birth of their second child. Many believed Englishman Donald, who also tops the money list, had sewn up the PGA’s Tour Player of the Year award with his sizzling end-of-season win in the Children’s Miracle Network Classic in Disney World.
However, PGA Tour officials, rebuffing claims of US bias, decided last week to wait until after the HSBC Champions, which counts as an official win if one of their players claims victory, before posting Player of the Year ballots.
SSC Napoli’s Italian Serie A title hopes suffered a late setback on Sunday when they were held to a 2-2 draw at home against Genoa, setting up a thrilling season finale with closest rivals Inter just one point behind. The hosts remain top with 78 points, holding a slim lead over Inter, who won 2-0 at Torino earlier on Sunday, with two rounds remaining. To make matters worse for Napoli, midfielder Stanislav Lobotka, struggling with an ankle injury, was forced off just minutes after the match began. Scott McTominay delivered a perfect pass into the box where Romelu Lukaku got
Harry Kane opened the scoring ahead of lifting his first career silverware as Bayern Munich beat Borussia Moenchengladbach 2-0, with veteran Thomas Mueller playing his last home game for the club. Bayern officially won the title on May 4 when defending champions Bayer Leverkusen were held to a 2-2 draw at Freiburg, but were presented with the Bundesliga shield in front of their home fans at full-time. Dripping wet after being showered with beer by teammates, Kane said the title win was “an incredible feeling,” and hoped it would be “the first of many.” “It’s been lot of hard work, a lot of
INTER AWAIT: Superb saves by PSG ’keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma inspired the victory, as Arsenal were punished for misses, including one by Bukayo Saka Arsenal on Wednesday fell short on the big stage again as their painful UEFA Champions League semi-final exit against Paris Saint-Germain left Mikel Arteta to rue his club’s failure to provide him with enough attacking options. Arteta’s side were unable to reach the Champions League final for the first time in 19 years as PSG clinched a tense 2-1 win at Parc des Princes. Trailing 1-0 from last week’s first leg in London, the Gunners made a blistering start to the second leg, but could not convert their chances as Gianluigi Donnarumma’s superb saves inspired PSG’s 3-1 aggregate victory. Arsenal were punished for
Taiwanese e-sports veteran Lin “ET” Chia-hung yesterday successfully defended his King of Fighters XV title at this year’s Evolution Championship Series: Japan (EVO Japan), securing his second consecutive championship. Lin claimed victory with a 3-1 win over Japanese pro gamer “mok” in the grand final, repeating his earlier 3-1 win against the same opponent in the winners’ final. The 40-year-old earned a ¥1 million (US$6,897) cash prize at the two-day tournament, which drew 294 competitors. Mok, Lin’s toughest rival in the bracket, took home ¥400,000 as runner-up. Lin remains undefeated in match sets against mok in King of Fighters XV, holding a 10-0 record,