Orlando Sentinel

Oosthuizen leads in Mexico as newcomers shine

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MEXICO CITY — Two of the European Tour's hottest players brought their best golf to their first World Golf Championsh­ip.

Louis Oosthuizen, a world-class player for the better part of a decade, drilled a long iron into 4 feet for eagle on the par-5 15th and had birdies on two of the short par 4s at Chapultepe­c Golf Club for a 7-under 64 in the Mexico Championsh­ip on Thursday.

Right behind were two players unfamiliar to the world stage, though they sure didn't play like it.

Shubhankar Sharma, the 21-year-old from India and the only two-time winner on the European Tour this season, holed an eagle chip after making the turn and finished with a wedge into 2 feet for birdie and a 65.

“I was very nervous in the morning, but very happy with the way I put it all together,” Sharma said.

Chris Paisley of England, who followed his victory in the South African Open with a pair of top 5s against strong fields in the Middle East, had his name atop the leaderboar­d for most of the warm afternoon until he came up short of the 16th and made his lone bogey in a round of 65.

“After the win in SA, I didn't want to just be happy with winning. I wanted to kind of press on and that's what I did,” Paisley said.

Sharma won his first European Tour event late last year at the Joburg Open, also played at altitude, and then last month he closed with a 62 to win the Malaysian Open. He was in Oman and Qatar before coming over to Mexico, and fatigue was hardly an issue, even walking the hilly course at nearly 7,800 feet above sea level.

“I'm actually relaxed now. I just wanted the first round to get out of the way,” Sharma said.

Xander Schauffele also was at 65, while Rafael Cabrera Bello and Kiradech Aphibarnra­t were at 66.

This World Golf Championsh­ip lived up to its name for at least one day. The top six on the leaderboar­d came from South Africa, England, India, Spain and Thailand. The lone American, Schauffele, has a German father with French heritage and a mother who was born in Taiwan and raised in Japan.

Defending champion Dustin Johnson opened with a 69, the kind of round that showed that a slightly softer Chapultepe­c allowed for low scoring, but there were big mistakes equally available. Johnson found that out on No. 14, his fifth hole of the round. From a cluster of trees, Johnson hit one of them and knew he was in trouble when he could hear the ball go through bushes on the other side of the boundary fence.

Johnson had another shot disappear under a tower. He made six birdies for the round.

“I had some really good holes, I had some really bad holes,” Johnson said. “I felt like I was just struggling all day.”

Bubba Watson, coming off a victory at Riviera, also had a 69 and had reason to feel even worse. He was leading at 7 under until running off four bogeys in a six-hole stretch at the end of his round.

Justin Thomas didn't carry over his best form from last week's playoff victory at the Honda Classic. He opened with a 72, leaving him eight shots out of the lead.

Jordan Spieth opened with a 70.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? India's Shubhankar Sharma holed an eagle chip after making the turn and finished his round with a birdie for 65.
MARCO UGARTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS India's Shubhankar Sharma holed an eagle chip after making the turn and finished his round with a birdie for 65.

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