The Commercial Appeal

Rahm part of six-way tie for lead in Mexico

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PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico – Jon Rahm is the biggest star in the Mexico Open and he lived up to his billing Thursday, chipping in for birdie and making a late eagle putt for a 7-under 64 and a six-way share of the lead in the first round.

Jonathan Byrd, Brendon Todd, Trey Mullinax and Monday qualifier Bryson Nimmer also were at 64 from the morning wave. Nimmer played his final five holes in 5 under, including a bunker shot he holed out for eagle on the par-5 sixth hole.

Kurt Kitayama faced the strength of the afternoon wind and made nine birdies, getting up-and-down from behind the green on the par-5 18th for his 64.

The Mexico Open is part of the PGA Tour schedule and inherits the history of a national open that dates to 1944. It takes the place of the World Golf Championsh­ips-mexico Championsh­ip that was at Chapultepe­c in Mexico City for four years through 2020.

Rahm knew very little about the Vidanta Vallarta course except that he felt comfortabl­e off the tee, and it showed. The Spaniard missed only one fairway, and three greens.

He opened with a 15-foot birdie putt on the par-5 12th hole, but it was the chip-in from 30 feet on the 13th that really got him going. He had to save par on the 10th and 11th holes at the start of his round.

“I hadn’t hit my best irons shots early on,” Rahm said. “Chipped that one in from an uncomforta­ble lie and a tough one. That was a huge bonus. I think a lot of people obviously would look at the eagle on 7, but that one early on was a huge booster.”

The eagle on the 311-yard seventh hole was set up by a big drive to the middle of the green on the par 4 and a 40foot putt that gave him a share of the lead.

Rahm also made birdie on each of the three par 5s on the back nine, and perhaps his finest shot was his approach from 206 yards to just inside 4 feet for birdie on the par-4 fourth.

Nimmer finished with a blaze of good shots. After a 12-foot birdie putt on the par-3 fifth, he holed out for eagle, pitched to 2 feet on the reachable sevpast

enth and made a 12-foot birdie putt on the par-3 ninth to close out his round.

Aaron Rai, Aaron Wise, Sahith Theegala and Scott Brown were at 65. Rai and Theegala could use top finishes this week to move up in PGA Championsh­ip points and try to secure a spot at Southern Hills in three weeks.

Next week is the final event for players to qualify in points, which is PGA Tour earnings.

Rahm and Abraham Ancer (71) are the only players from the top 20 in the world at the Mexico Open. That allowed for players like Byrd, who has status as a

champion, to get in.

He improved his status with a pair of cuts made in the fall. He tied for ninth at Pebble Beach, which got him into the Phoenix Open. Byrd has managed to get in 10 tournament­s so far, and feels he is getting some momentum.

“I started the year thinking I might get in 15, looks like I might get in more like 20. I’m just happy to have starts,” Byrd said. “And my game’s good, so trying to stay aggressive and see what I can make of it.”

Byrd went out in 29 and reached 7 under for the round with a birdie on the par-5 12th. He added a bogey and a birdie the rest of the way.

Patrick Reed won the Mexico Championsh­ip at Chapultepe­c two years ago. He had six birdies in his round of 68, leaving him three shots behind.

The wind off the Pacific began to blow as Rahm and other starters had an hour or so to go in their rounds, so the Spaniard will have that to contend with on Friday.

LPGA Tour

PALOS VERDES ESTATES, Calif. – Minjee Lee shot an 8-under 63 on Thursday to take a one-stroke lead over top-ranked Jin Young Ko after the first round of the Palos Verdes Championsh­ip.

Coming off a third-place tie Sunday in the LA Open at Whilshire Country Club, Lee had a bogey-free round at hilly Palos Verdes Estates in the first-year event that wraps up the LPGA Tour’s West Coast swing.

Ko had six straight birdies on Nos. 2-7 on her final nine. She stumbled to a tie for 21st last week after sharing the lead with winner Nasa Hataoka late in the third round at difficult Whilshire.

Charley Hull, Moriya Jutanugarn and Jennifer Chang shot 65. Albane Valenzuela and Gemma Dryburgh were at 66, with Dryburgh having the best round in the breezier afternoon session. The Scot holed a 6-iron for eagle on the par-4 fifth.

Lexi Thompson and Lydia Ko each shot 69 in the afternoon.

Anna Davis, the Augusta National Women’s Amateur winner, opened with a 71 in her first LPGA Tour start.

“Pretty happy,” the 37-year-old Bekker said. “It’s tricky out there, it’s a tough golf course. You just keep your head down and try to hit a good shot every time you step up to hit it. It punishes you if hit it off line out here. You can never relax, that’s the thing around this golf course.”

Pablo Larrazábal, seeking his third European tour win of the season, was at even-par for the day after making a bogey and an eagle. The Spaniard won last week’s ISPS Handa Championsh­ip for his first victory on home soil. He had also won at the Mygolflife Open in South Africa.

 ?? EDUARDO VERDUGO/AP ?? Jon Rahm of Spain tees off on the 12th hole during the first round of the Mexico Open in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, on Thursday.
EDUARDO VERDUGO/AP Jon Rahm of Spain tees off on the 12th hole during the first round of the Mexico Open in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, on Thursday.

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