The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Scots prove point with blistering Gleneagles starts

Scots prove point with blistering start to Scottish Strokeplay at Gleneagles

- STEVE SCOTT stsvott@thecourier.co.uk

Euan Walker did much to justify his selection for the Scotland team for next week’s Eisenhower Trophy in Ireland but Euan McIntosh did as much to justify the feeling he should be going too on the first day at the Carrick Neill Scottish Open Championsh­ip yeserday.

Walker, 23 yesterday, was one of three controvers­ially picked for the World Team Championsh­ip ahead of Scottish matchplay champion McIntosh, the 49-year-old who has won two more events since his victory at Blairgowri­e at the beginning of the month.

Yet while McIntosh continued that superb form with a two-under 68 to start on Gleneagles’ famous King’s Course, Walker went one better to share the lead with Yorkshire champion Sam Rook.

McIntosh is in third with Scottish Boys’ champion Connor Wilson and Australia-based Scot Ben Ferguson, among others.

The reputation of the King’s Course as a competitiv­e theatre for elite golf has taken a battering in recent years, but the attention paid by the owners to the great old track since the Ryder Cup four years ago has restored much of its greatness, specifical­ly in green speeds that protected it yesterday.

Walker got “a bit of a fright” when a simple birdie putt rolled 12 feet by on the first, but he holed that one and a birdie at the blind third set him up for a solid round.

“The greens were lightning but those putts on the first three holes really settled me down,” he said. He finished with four birdies on the back nine.

Eisenhower team-mates Ryan Lumsden and Sandy Scott have opted not to play in the championsh­ip – Scott had to return to college in Texas anyway – but Walker didn’t give resting a thought ahead of his date at Carton House.

“I haven’t played competitiv­ely since the Scottish Amateur so this was a chance to get a couple of competitiv­e rounds in before the big one next week,” he said.

“It was a nice score on my birthday as well.”

McIntosh’s preparatio­n to start his bid of the matchplay-strokeplay double wasn’t ideal, not warming up because he needed 40 minutes to find a parking space – a pressman inadverten­tly took the last one in the golfer’s park close to the first tee as Euan drove in – and as a result his first holes “were a little funky”.

“Thirty five putts tells the story, and I thought we had the best conditions for the day, the wind really died down and there was a score to be had on the back nine,” he said.

“I’m going to try everything to win four in a row, but the quality this week I’ll have to play the very best I can manage,” he said.

“There’s a lot of a good young players in the field, and I’ll have to putt a lot better than I did today.”

One who did capitalise on the wind at his back on the back nine was Wilson, the 17-year-old protege of Stephen Gallacher who won the Boys’ title at Moray in July.

Four-over after five and still three-over on the 12th tee, he had five birdies in the last seven holes, the highlight coming with a 35-foot putt on 17, followed by the regulation two-putt birdie at the last.

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