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Fleetwood sets pace at British Open alongside amateur Lamprecht

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Home favourite Tommy Fleetwood set the pace on the opening day of the British Open with a five-under-par 66 alongside South African amateur Christo Lamprecht and Emiliano Grillo as the big guns struggled.

World number one Scottie Scheffler and five-time major winner Brooks Koepka are at one under, while Rory McIlroy salvaged a par at the 18th to end the day at Hoylake five shots off the lead.

Lamprecht shone on his debut at the majors with a 66 after earning his place by winning the Amateur Championship at the nearby Hillside course last month.

The powerful 22-year-old, who stands 6 feet 8 inches (2.03 metres) tall, used his long levers to great effect around the Royal Liverpool course on Thursday.

“I earned my spot to be here. I think the way I played today I earned to be on the top of the leaderboard, as of now,” said Lamprecht.

Fleetwood, who hails from Southport, just 30 miles (48 kilometres) from the course, gave his chances of a first major title win a huge boost with a run of three consecutive birdies between the 14th and 16th.

“If you aren’t going to enjoy this and these ex-periences, what’s the point? Make sure you have the time of your life out there because it’s very special,” said the world number 21.

“I’m leading the Open and had cheers like that, it’s really special.” Argentina’s Grillo produced a stunning five-under par back nine to surge into a share of the overnight lead.

Back at the scene of his only British Open tri-umph in 2014, McIlroy got off to a slow start in his bid for a first major title in nine years.

Hs putter let him down with a shocking miss from three feet for par at the eighth to make the turn at one over.

However, back-to-back birdies at the 14th and 15th kickstarted his round before a dramatic five at the last.

McIlroy fluffed his first attempt to play out of the green-side bunker before a superb chip and putt limited the damage.

The Northern Irishman said even par was a “solid start” in tricky, windy conditions. “It was really good in the end — these bunkers are just really tough, it doesn’t seem to go into the middle of them and you’re always up against the face,” he told Sky Sports.

“I was quite lucky, it could have gone into a deeper part of my foot print and I’d have been there all night.” Masters champion Jon Rahm was not so lucky as he paid for also finding a bunker at the 18th with a bogey that dropped the Spaniard to three over.

Scheffler got off to a flying start — two under after four holes — but the American’s charge was derailed after dropping three shots in seven holes around the turn.—AFP

 

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