Manila Bulletin

Rates, Carlos ride flurry of birdies

- BIANCA PAGDANGANA­N

Knight, 4&2, in their highly anticipate­d match Wednesday.

Arizona leaned on victories by YuSang Hou, Sandra Nordaas and Haley Moore as the Wildcats earned their third national title.

The victory earned Arizona a spot in the Marathon Classic to be played on July 12-15 at the Highland Meadows Golf Club in Ohio. Joenard Rates and Jobim Carlos matched birdie-birdie finishes on opposite nines for 71s as they kept their spots on top, one stroke ahead of erstwhile co-leader Jerson Balasabas halfway through R3-million ICTSI Villamor Philippine Masters at the Villamor Golf Club yesterday. The diminutive Rates turned from erratic to splendid, rebounding from a threeover card after seven holes with four birdies in the next six, including three straight from No. 11. He then recovered from a doubleboge­y mishap on No. 16 with closing birdies to save a 38-33 card on a tight layout that puts premium on driving. In a separate flight at the back, Carlos also struggled with three bogeys against two birdies but the recent winner of the National Pro-am with DJ Padilla gunned down a second straight birdie on No. 4 and holed out with back-to-back birdies to negate a bogey on the par-3 seventh for a 34-37.

With 138 aggregates, the duo stayed on top for the second straight day but braced for a spirited charge from the rest of their pursuers in the last two rounds of the 72-hole championsh­ip sponsored by ICTSI, including Balasabas, who struggled off the mound and missed keeping his spot at the top with a last-hole mishap on No. 9 for a 72 and a 139.

“I have to find a way to be consistent off the tee. Made bad drives, especially at the back and the wind later affected my game in the last nine,” said Carlos, who with the rest of the surviving 44-player field headed straight to the range to tinker with their driving.

“I missed a lot of my tee shots but my putting worked so I’m still at it,” said Balasabas, who vowed to strike back in today’s third round, particular­ly on the par-5 holes.

Rene Menor, a former PGT Asia leg winner, and Gerald Rosales, a former champion of an all-local Philippine Open, assembled identical 141s after a 70 and 71, respective­ly, for joint fourth while veteran and multi-titled Jay Bayron bogeyed two of the last three holes at the front for a 73 and dropped to a share of sixth with Jhonnel Ababa (70) and Albin Engino (74) at 142.

Orlan Sumcad, the other player in the four-man lead pack after 18 holes of the fabled event organized by Pilipinas Golf Tournament­s, Inc., failed to recover from a bogey-double bogeybogey misfortune from No. 12 and hobbled with a 76, tumbling to joint ninth with Anthony Fernando and Dutch Guido Van der Valk, who both fired 71s, at 143, now five strokes behind the joint leaders.

The other pre-tournament favorites also stood too far behind with mediocre rounds despite calm condition in the afternoon as the tight, hazard laden military layout held its ground and yielded just 13 under-par scores.

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