The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Kelly cards super 62 to leave field scrambling

-

Chris Kelly tightened his grip on the M&H Logistics Scottish PGA Championsh­ip title right out of the gates at Gleneagles by leaving the field scrambling again from the first round on the King’s Course.

The 41-year-old, now based in St Andrews, started last year’s gun-to-tape title victory with a 63 and went one better to open his defence with an eight-under-par 62 and an immediate four-shot lead.

Two eagles, the second at the 18th, paced his brilliant performanc­e as he bids to join illustriou­s names like John Panton, Eric Brown, Bernard Gallacher, Sam Torrance and Ross Drummond as a four-time winner of the oldest profession­al-only championsh­ip in golf.

Newmachar’s Greg McBain lies second on 66 with a quartet a shot further back on threeunder including former European Tour player Jamie McLeary.

Kelly won his previous titles in 2003 – on the PGA Centenary rather than the King’s – and in 2015 before claiming his third win last year. He said: “If only every golf tournament could be played here.

“I holed a couple of putts at the first two holes – one from the back edge at the first from 25 feet back down the hill, then a 30-footer at the second – and it just went from there.”

He eagled the long sixth, hitting a seven iron to 12 feet, and then hit in to 15 feet at the last with a six iron.

“It’s better than I expected as I have not been playing much this year and didn’t know what to expect this week,” he added.

The condition of the King’s has improved immeasurab­ly in the last four years since the Ryder Cup with nearly an inch-and-a-half of rain over the weekend shrugged off.

McBain also finished with an eagle at the last, while McLeary, making his debut in the event, had six birdies.

A group on two-under 68s includes twice champion Greig Hutcheon, 2012 winner Graham Fox and last year’s Order of Merit winner Paul O’Hara

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom