The Post

Jet-lag par for the course for high-flying Fox

- Doug Ferguson

Playing golf on foreign soil is nothing new to Kiwi No 1 Ryan Fox. He just didn’t know what planet he was on yesterday in the Mexico Championsh­ip.

Fox was home in New Zealand this week, fresh off a European Tour victory in the Super 6 Matchplay in Perth that moved him to No 66 in the world. He had plans for a little fishing, a little wine and some practice ahead of the 100th edition of the New Zealand Open.

That’s when he got the call he was in the field as an alternate for a World Golf Championsh­ip and its US$10.25 million (NZ$15.14 million) purse.

That’s when his adventures began. He booked a flight to Mexico City and arrived at 8.30pm Wednesday. He was in the second group off Thursday (yesterday NZ time) at Chapultepe­c Golf Club, a course he had never seen, at an altitude (2134m) he had never experience­d.

Then jet lag kicked in.

‘‘I fell asleep at 10.30pm, no problem, and woke up at midnight,’’ he said. ‘‘Took a sleeping pill about half-past 1am and didn’t know what planet I was on when the alarm went at 7 this morning.

‘‘So, I actually felt all right for most of the round. It really hit me on 13, 14. Kind of felt drunk almost the last five or six holes, limbs flying everywhere. And I hung on pretty well.’’

By all accounts, his one-over 72 might have felt just as good as the 63 by Rory McIlroy to lead after the first round.

Jake McLeod has a Kiwi caddie who was kind enough to leave yardage books at Fox’s hotel room when he checked in, so he sat down with his coach to try to plot his way around Chapultepe­c. The decision was to keep golf as simple as possible.

Most players hit driver over the trees on the 383-yard second hole near the front of the green. Fox laid up with an iron.

‘‘It looks like there’s some lines you can take the golf course on,’’ he said.

‘‘But not having seen it, it’s pretty hard to do that. So I tried to stay out of trouble as much as possible today.’’

Fox was headed for the range after the round, to practice in altitude and mainly try to stay awake.

‘‘I’ve got some caffeine ready to go, as well, and hopefully I can make it past dinnertime tonight and get a good sleep,’’ he said. ‘‘I actually came to the golf course early today to do some yardages on TrackMan because I had no idea how far it was going to go.

‘‘So at least I don’t have to do that tomorrow. I can spend an extra couple hours in bed and hopefully can feel a little bit better.’’

This is the first year for alternates at the World Golf Championsh­ips. Fox got in for Andrew Putnam, whose wife is having a baby.

Considerin­g he played the last five weeks – three straight in the Middle East, two in Australia – he could have used a break, especially with his national open next week.

‘‘We were tossing up, ‘do we come here with no preparatio­n, and then needing preparatio­n for the New Zealand Open?’ But in the end, it’s a WGC,’’ he said.

Two bogeys on the back nine have pushed Fox back into the pack. He was in a 12-way tie for 35th when all of the field had returned to the clubhouse.

Fox, fresh from his breakthrou­gh European Tour win in the World Super 6 Matchplay in Perth over the weekend, birdied both par-threes on the front nine to be two-under at the Club de Golf Chapultepe­c course.

However, he dropped a shot on the par-four eighth to be one-under heading into the back nine.

Fox was unable to birdie any hole on the back nine and with had bogeys on both par-fives (holes 11 and 15) to finish one-over and fall back down the leaderboar­d. He was tied for ninth earlier in his round.

Spaniard Adrian Otaegui, who finished runner-up to Fox in Perth, was five strokes worse than the Kiwi in the opening round.

Ryan Fox

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? It’s been a champagne period for New Zealand golfer Ryan Fox, here celebratin­g his win in the Super 6 Matchplay event in Perth last weekend.
GETTY IMAGES It’s been a champagne period for New Zealand golfer Ryan Fox, here celebratin­g his win in the Super 6 Matchplay event in Perth last weekend.

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