The Philippine Star

Castro, 2 others take charge in Phl Am Open

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SILANG, Cavite – Luis Castro and Korean Hwang Min-jeong battled through sun, drizzle and gale-force winds and came away with a 70 and 67, respective­ly, as they seized the lead in their respective sides at the start of the 2018 Philippine Amateur Open Championsh­ip at Riviera Golf and Country Club’s Couples course here yesterday.

Castro and Hwang leaned on their backside charge to take control with the former, seeking a follow-up to his inaugural Aguinaldo Open romp last year, hitting three birdies against a bogey for a 36-34 card and a threestrok­e lead over Thai Nopparat Panichphon, Rupert Zaragosa and Korean Tom Kim.

Aidric Chan, winner of last year’s NGAP Northern Luzon Regional, and Paolo Wong, who bagged the National Doubles title with Don Petil two weeks ago, also came up with late two-under cards to force a three-way tie for the lead in men’s play.

Hwang, on the other hand, sizzled with a four-birdie binge to post a huge four-shot margin over Korean Lee Ji Hyeon in the women’s division of the 72-hole championsh­ip sponsored by the MVP Sports Foundation and backed by One Tagaytay Place Hotel Suites as official hotel.

Zaragosa and Weiwei Gao actually wrested control with 35s at the front but wavered in the last nine holes. Zaragosa slid after a double-bogey mishap on No. 15 while Gao faded with a 40.

Panichphon, meanwhile, fought back from a three-over card with back-to-back birdies from No. 16 as the Thai moved into early contention in the country’s premier event serving as part Hwang Min-jeong of the PLDT Group National Amateur Golf Tour.

Kim also squandered a frontside 34 with a closing 39.

Edgar Oh and Donovan Lee, both of Singapore, shot identical 74s while Gao slipped to joint sixth at 75 with Gen Nagai and Aniceto Mandanas, the bestplaced Filipino at fourth in last year’s staging of the tournament organized and conducted by the National Golf Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

But while a furious battle for the men’s crown loomed despite Castro’s three-shot edge, Hwang opened up a lead in their side of the duel that her rivals might find it tough to overhaul given her form and playing condition.

She launched her bid with birdies on Nos. 2 and 3 and though she dropped to even par card with bogeys on Nos. 4 and 6, the young Korean rebounded with three straight birdies from No. 9 then knocked down two more on Nos. 14 and 17 to pull away.

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