Philippine Daily Inquirer

AUSTRALIA TAKES EARLY LEAD, DARKHORSE PH SIX DOWN

- By Musong R. Castillo @musongINQ

CARMONA, CAVITE—Powerhouse Australia flexed its muscles, defending champion Thailand was saved by its young spearhead, Singapore made its intentions known and darkhorse Philippine­s held its own after the first round of the 29th Nomura Cup that saw nine countries break par to make it interestin­g for the rest of the week.

Jack Buchanan returned one of three six-under-par 66s and Quinnton Croker fired a 69, and the Aussies were so prolific that they had to throw away a 70 from Jimmy Hydes for a 135 and a two-shot lead over Singapore, which was powered by a reedy Arizona State University alum, James Leow, who also shot a 66.

Kristoffer Arevalo drained five birdies coming out to fire a 70 and Cody Rolida backed him up with a solid 71 as the young Filipinos will open the second round Wednesday just six shots behind, with Arevalo not sounding worried at all despite a number of sterling individual scores on a humid day at Manila Southwoods’ Masters layout.

“There’s still a lot of golf left, a lot more holes to play,” said Arevalo, who had six birdies only to bogey four straight holes from the 13th because of bad putting. “We’re in a good position and we will keep on attacking.”

Rolida, a the 21-year-old national team rookie, rebounded with three of his four birdies in the back nine to rescue a 38-33. Elee Bisera, another rookie, did not count with a 72.

While it was no surprise that Australia was at the top or near it, Singapore made a lot of heads turn after Leow had seven birdies against a bogey that had the Singaporea­ns breathing down the necks of the Aussies.

“We just want to beat ourselves,” the 25-year-old Leow, whose only bogey came on the opening hole, said.

Chinese Taipei and Japan were three shots behind.

Thailand lay another shot back thanks to a 66 by the seasoned Arsit Areephun, who gunned down eight birdies in a 33-33 effort that cushioned the impact of mediocre rounds turned in by Ashita Piamkulvan­ich (73) and Pongsapak Laopakdee (75).

 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Kristoffer Arevalo: Six birdies, four bogeys
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Kristoffer Arevalo: Six birdies, four bogeys

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