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Schoeman can’t wait to join Scotland’s Springboks

- STUART BATHGATE

PIERRE Schoeman still has four months to wait before he will be eligible to play for Scotland, but has admitted that the success of three compatriot­s has made him all the more eager to become involved with the national side.

The 26-year-old Edinburgh prop will qualify for Gregor

Townsend’s side in July on the three-year residence rule, and if and when selected will follow in the footsteps of his fellow-South Africans Duhan van der Merwe, Jaco van der Walt and Oli Kebble. The two Edinburgh backs and Glasgow prop Kebble have all made successful debuts for Scotland this season, and Schoeman has been particular­ly impressed by

Van der Merwe, who he is sure has played himself into contention for a place in this year’s Lions squad.

“I’ve been massively impressed by them – I’m very proud of them,” Schoeman said. “It gives me a lot of inspiratio­n and motivation to go and play for Scotland. You almost can’t sit in front of the telly and watch with your wife, because you just want to go outside and hit a tree or something. You just want to play as well.

“With Jaco, Oli and Duhan all coming into the team, it’s amazing for me to see that it’s a possibilit­y that can come true. You can actually be part of it, give back and make a difference.

“If you look at how well Duhan is playing at the moment, with his British and Irish Lions

chances as well, it’s very inspiring and motivation­al. I always knew from his early days at the Bulls that he just needed a coach that backed him and a team where he could prove himself. And that’s what he’s done, first at Edinburgh and now with Scotland. He’s not a one-hit wonder or someone who’s had good luck. He’s really a world-class player.”

RORY McIlroy revealed he approaches Bay Hill in a similar way to Tiger Woods, who has won eight times at the venue as a profession­al and once as an amateur.

McIlroy brilliantl­y capitalise­d on a stroke of good luck to make a superb start to his bid for a second victory in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al.

McIlroy, who won at Bay Hill in 2018 and has finished no worse than tied sixth in each of the last four years, fired seven birdies – including five in a row on his back nine – and one bogey in an opening 66 to set the early clubhouse target.

“I feel like you don’t have to do anything special to shoot a good score here,” McIlroy said. “You can be really conservati­ve off the tees if you want to be.

“I think the toughest thing about this course is the parthrees and I played them in three under today. So that was a bonus. But I’ve watched Tiger enough here over the years and the way he played this course was, he played it very conservati­vely, he took care of the par fives and that was usually good enough to get the job done. So I sort of take a little leaf out of his book.”

At six under par McIlroy led by one from US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, with Jason Kokrak on four under and Scotland’s Martin Laird, the 2011 champion, another stroke back alongside France’s Victor Perez.

Playing alongside McIlroy, defending champion Tyrrell

Hatton and 2019 winner Francesco Molinari both struggled badly, Hatton returning a five-over-par 77 and former Open champion Molinari shooting 78.

Starting from the 10th,

McIlroy picked up shots on the 14th and 17th before making a mess of the 18th from the middle of the fairway and showing his frustratio­n by slamming his club into the turf following a clumsy chip from short of the green.

A somewhat sheepish smile was back on McIlroy’s face after he holed from 55 feet on the second, the putt having been struck much too hard but hitting the pin and dropping for an unlikely birdie.

There was nothing fortunate about the curling birdie putt McIlroy holed from 20 feet on the third, nor the two putts from long range for another on the par-five fourth. And after a superb approach to the fifth set up another birdie, McIlroy soon made it five in a row by finding the green on the par-five sixth in two and two-putting from 25 feet.

Hatton had opened with four straight pars before dropping shots on the 14th and 15th after failing to get up and down from bunkers on both.

The world No.6, who is the top-ranked player in the field, then three-putted the par-five 16th from long range for a disappoint­ing par and threw his ball into the water after a bogey on the 18th. Hatton also carded a hat-trick of bogeys from the second before carding his only birdie of the day on the par-five sixth.

 ??  ?? Rory McIlroy shot an opening round 66 to move into the lead in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at Bay Hill
Rory McIlroy shot an opening round 66 to move into the lead in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at Bay Hill

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