Sanchez Strikes Late To Lead On Opening Day Of Drama At Millbrook Resort

Playing in an event
he rates as one of his top three on Tour, Australia’s
Matias Sanchez cashed in on the best scoring conditions in
round one to take the lead at the New Zealand Open presented
by Millbrook Resort.
After an
overnight soaking led to a three-hour delay to start the
opening round on Thursday, Sanchez carded a 7-under-par 64
as the winds dropped and light faded on the Remarkables
course, holing his last putt at 8.26pm.
Young
Kiwi amateur Yuki Miya, at 6-under-par with five holes left
to play when his first 18 resumes tomorrow morning, is his
nearest challenger.

A group of
three players at 5-under-par includes Wade Ormsby (Aus) and
Kevin Na (US) who fired 66s, and the highest-ranked New
Zealander in the field, Daniel Hillier, who will have 23
holes on his schedule on day two.
Sanchez’s
round was bogey-free and included a run of three birdies in
four holes to start his second nine.
“I was
just really happy to get it done, get the round in,” the
winner of Webex Players Series South Australia last October
said.
“This (event) is right up there, so to
do it here, it's really special, but I know it's a quarter
of the way down. It doesn't really mean a whole
lot.”

Ormsby, whose
last tournament was as a fill-in player at LIV Adelaide,
could rightly claim to have produced the best round of
Thursday. His 66 came on the Coronet course which played
considerably the more difficult of the two, providing just
10 of the top 29 scores on the end-of-day
leaderboard.
A winner of five titles on the
Asian Tour, including the Hong Kong Open twice, the South
Australian is still searching for a victory on his home
tour.
“I've never won on the Aussie tour and
that's something that I've always wanted to try and do,”
Ormsby said.
“It's nice to put myself towards
the pointy end early in the week.”
Ormsby’s
round started in the heaviest shower of the morning, with
the temperature barely above 10 degrees, and the blustery
southerly wind making conditions feel even colder. He
admitted the opening six holes were a real
struggle.
“I was just trying to put in damage
control at the start and played a pretty good golf towards
the end there,” he said.
After leaving LIV
Golf, Na has come to Queenstown to start a new chapter of
his 24-year professional career and he negotiated today’s
round without a bogey.
“I haven't played
competition golf in three months or so, maybe longer, but I
feel like there's a good energy, there's a positive energy
and I'm happy.” he said.
“Mind is fresh and
I feel like I have a chance to enjoy golf
more.”
That carefree attitude was tested on
the par-5 first hole, Na’s 10th for the day, when he
miss-hit a driver off the fairway with his second shot, his
ball careening into his amateur partner’s about 100 metres
ahead.
“I kind of hit it thin and it was one
of those low runners, but it would've gone 230-240 no
problem, and it hits my partner's ball and I lost about good
80 yards,” he lamented.
“I managed to hit a
really good shot next and make par …. and looked at my
partner. I was like ‘I'm glad I made par because I
would've been pissed if I made bogey’.”

The
shot of the day came from New Zealand’s Kazuma Kobori who
used a 4-iron to hole out on the 210m fourth hole of the
Remarkables course, his second ace of the Challenger PGA
Tour of Australasia season, following on from a one on the
Party Hole at the BMW Australian PGA
Championship.
“It was kind of unexpected to
get (another) one so soon,” Kobori said after finishing on
4-under-par 67.
“You don't really expect to
hole it on that hole, especially with 4-iron in hand in
these conditions.”
The DP World Tour member
was in a share of the lead at 5-under-par when he came to
his final hole, but he found the hazard on the par-3 ninth
hole on the Remarkables, leading to only his second bogey
for the day.
The next best New Zealander to
complete his round was Kobori’s playing partner,
54-year-old Steven Alker, who shot a 3-under-par 69,
impressing his much younger opponent.
“Stevie
played really nicely. It was nice to play with him because
he plays the game in a similar way that I do,” Kobori
said.
“So it was good to play with him and
then kind of bounce off of each
other.”
Almost half of the 156-man field
wasn’t able to complete the opening round today and will
resume at 7.40am on
Friday.
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