The National - News

REED FENDS OFF ‘REALLY AWFUL’ BACK PAIN TO HIT THE FRONT

▶ American shoots 7-under par 65 to nose ahead of Rose and Hend by a stroke on first day of DP World Tour Championsh­ip

- JOHN McAULEY More golf on page 30

Patrick Reed arrived in Dubai late on Tuesday, got in some decent practice on Wednesday, but woke up yesterday with a “really awful” pain in his back. Then he went out and posted the lowest score of the day at the DP World Tour Championsh­ip.

The American, best known for his Ryder Cup resolve, displayed another sort of mettle at the Earth course during his first round to open his account with a flawless 65.

Reed had initially felt in fine fettle having worked hard with his coach following last week’s missed cut in Mexico, but when the alarm went off to signal the start to his Dubai day, he discovered a stab in his back, not far from his shoulder.

Thus, he struggled on the range pre-round, but proceeded to shoot his best tally in five attempts around Jumeirah Golf Estates. It was not all of his own making, though.

“Yeah, the warm-up wasn’t how I wanted to be,” Reed said. “I was kind of spraying it, and then my caddie just looked at me and reminded me, ‘hey, you’re a gamer, not a range guy’. Let’s get off to a good start, hit some fairways and hit some greens.”

So Reed simply went out and did that. He opened with two birdies, before a run of seven straight pars was snapped by a birdie on 10. He added another four on the way in, including one on each of the final two holes.

It carried Reed to 7-under par and gave him a one-stroke lead going into Round 2, with Race to Dubai challenger Justin Rose and Australian Scott Hend his closest challenger­s.

Seventeen others are within four shots, a pack highlighte­d by DP World defending champion Matt Fitzpatric­k, on 4-under.

Fiercely patriotic, Reed is something of anomaly this week, one of only four flying the Stars and Stripes in the 60-man field.

To be fair, Reed has always embraced the challenge of being a global player, and his appearance in Dubai – “an easy decision” – was locked in given he needed to contest another event on the European Tour to retain his playing rights for 2018. He actually believed it to be more.

“I was lucky, I thought I needed two since I didn’t know Presidents Cup counted as one event,” Reed said of the criteria, which changes next year. “It was nice enough to find out Presidents Cup counted and this is the only one I needed.”

It could be argued he needs a win, too. Reed has yet to land a title this season, with his best finish tied-second at the US PGA Championsh­ip in August. It came 12 months after his most recent success, at the 2016 Barclays on the PGA Tour.

Concluding the European circuit with some hardware would therefore be very welcome, although it is not the be all and end all.

“It’s important, but really the biggest thing for me is just improving my golf swing, improve around the greens and improve in all areas,” Reed said. “Hit the ball well, putt well.”

He did that yesterday, despite the travel and the aching back. In fact, it could have been even better. “Still feel like I left two or three out there,” Reed said. “But all in all, it’s a great start.”

 ?? Getty ?? Patrick Reed is yet to win a title this season, but the American said he will not put himself under pressure after taking the lead on Day 1 at Jumeirah Golf Estates
Getty Patrick Reed is yet to win a title this season, but the American said he will not put himself under pressure after taking the lead on Day 1 at Jumeirah Golf Estates
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