The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Coetzee and Fox enjoy conditions, with nearly 50 under par in Paris

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George Coetzee and Ryan Fox sat at the top of a heavily congested leaderboar­d after day one of the Amundi Open de France yesterday.

Continenta­l Europe’s oldest national open has moved from its traditiona­l summer spot in the schedule to the autumn and the softer conditions and lighter rough made scoring conditions favourable at the venue that was so formidable at last year’s Ryder Cup.

There were 49 players under par at the end of round one and Coetzee and Fox led the way after carding rounds of 65, each containing a single bogey.

Aberdonian Richie Ramsay was a shot off the lead at five under alongside local favourite Benjamin Hebert and American Kurt Kitayama.

South African Coetzee set the target in the morning and he reached seven under at one point before a bogey on the 17th dropped him back.

“It was almost perfect,” he told europeanto­ur. com. “I played really well. It’s nice to be in the mix again. It’s been kind of a hard, long year but it feels like the game is coming along nicely.”

Fox’s single blemish came on the 13th but he redeemed himself with a stunning tee shot on the par three 16th to share the lead.

“I’m pretty happy,” he said. “This is a golf course that can kick you pretty quickly. I played really solid today, holed some putts.

“I played those tough holes, that closing stretch, really well. I could have potentiall­y grabbed a couple more on those last four, which is always a bonus, but very happy to walk away with a 65 around here.”

Ramsay has already safely secured his playing privileges for next season after taking it right to the wire in 2018 and he enjoyed his opening 18 holes in the French capital.

“It’s obviously a fantastic golf course,” he said. “A little bit different this year. A bit colder, a bit softer, so the course is playing quite long.

“It’s a joy to play a golf course like this because it just tests the whole part of your game and mentally, obviously there’s a lot of water out there, so you have to be very committed to your shots.”

One man who did not enjoy the day was 2012 champion Marcel Siem, who disqualifi­ed himself after a rules mix-up.

The German incorrectl­y believed preferred lies were in play and lifted, cleaned and replaced his ball five times on the fairway in his first round before discoverin­g his error and walking off at the turn.

Liam Johnston is the second-best placed Scot after his three-under 68 saw him three shots off the lead, while Stephen Gallacher was one under, David Law and Marc Warren level par and Scott Jamieson threeover.

● The English trio of Bronte Law, Jodi Ewart Shadoff and Mel Reid lie two shots off the lead after the opening round of the Buick LPGA Shanghai. Japan’s Nasa Hataoka and South Korea’s Amy Kang share the lead on five under par.

 ??  ?? George Coetzee tees off at the 10th hole.
George Coetzee tees off at the 10th hole.

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