Feroze Garewal T18 at Taipei ADT

Feroze Garewal shot a fine 69 in the third round of the ADT event in Chinese Taipei

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Edited by Anand Datla

 

May 23, 2015: Feroze Singh Garewal moved inside the top 20 with a brilliant round of three-under 69 at the $120,000 Ambassador Asian Development Tour (ADT) golf event in Chinese Taipei.

 

Garewal moved up 14 spots to T18 after his best effort of the tournament in Hsinchu. Garewal had a miserable start when he gave away six shots on the first day, but has since gained five of those to finish day three at one-over 217.

 

The young Indian set up his round with three birdies in first four holes. A bogey at the 7th hole threatened to derail him but Garewal made ten straight pars from there to consolidate his card. A final flourish came at the 18th where he made another birdie to sign off with a 69.

 

Overnight leader Chan Shih-chang continued to dominate after carding a four-under-par 68 at the penultimate round on Saturday.

 

The local hotshot fired seven birdies against three bogeys for a three-day total of 12-under-par 204 to lead by four shots over countryman Lin Wen-tang, who signed for a 71, at the Hsin Feng Golf and Country Club.

 

Hsieh Tung-hung, also of Chinese Taipei, stayed another four shots back in third following a 68 while American duo Sam Cyr and Micah Lauren Shin posted rounds of 72 and 71 respectively to share fourth place on 213 at the Ambassador ADT, which is the 11th leg of the 2015 ADT season.

 

Singapore’s Choo Tze Huang registered a 72 to tie in sixth place with Chinese Taipei’s Tseng Hong-sheng (70) and American Blake Snyder (75) on 214 while Order of Merit leader Hsieh Chi-hsien of Chinese Taipei returned with a 74 to slip to tied-ninth position.

 

Chan enjoyed a superb front nine when he turned in with a flawless 32 before stumbling with a bogey on the 10th hole. He stormed back gallantly with three straight birdies from the 12th but dropped further shots on 15th and 18th.

 

“My front nine was solid. I took advantages of all the birdies chances I had and I putted well. I actually had some misjudgments reading the greens today. The greens are harder than it seems compared to the first two rounds even though it rained,” said the 28-year-old Chan, who amassed 27 putts.

 

“I made seven birdies today and I thought it was very good already. It’s not easy to make birdies on this course. I am feeling some pressure but I will try not to think too much. I just want to focus on hitting as many greens as I can and avoid making mistakes,” added Chan, who is chasing for a record fifth victory on the burgeoning Tour.

 

Lin, who holds a total of six Asian Tour victories and two ADT wins, admitted that he was far from his best after struggling with wayward drives throughout the round.

 

“I didn’t play as well as I did in the first two rounds. My tee shots were off but I putted well. I have been wanting give Chan some pressure throughout the round today but didn’t managed to. The greens are hard despite the rain,” said the 40-year-old Lin.

 

Like Chan, Lin is also playing on his home course and is bracing himself for a testing final round where he seeks to pile some pressure on Chan and pip him to victory.

 

“Chan has been playing well. We practiced together and we pretty much know each other’s standards. I will need to play very well to turn things in my favour tomorrow. I hope I can pile some pressure on him tomorrow and not let him run away with the victory too easily,” added Lin, who traded four birdies against three bogeys.

 

Since it was inaugurated in 2010, the ADT has grown from five events in the first year to a record 21 tournaments in both 2014 and 2015.

 

With the Olympic Games looming in 2016 where golf will be reintroduced as a medal sport, players in the region could earn their spots in Rio de Janeiro by earning Official World Golf Ranking points through the Asian Tour and ADT.

 

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