Rahil Gangjee, Himmat Rai, Gaganjeet Bhullar T7 at Hotram Open

They shot matching five-under 66s in the opening round to share the seventh spot

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Indians Score At Hotram Open

Good beginnings for Indian trio Rahil Gangjee, Himmat Rai and Gaganjeet Bhullar at Hotram Open as they wrapped up round one with T7. They shot matching five-under 66s in the opening round to share the seventh spot in the $1.5 million Ho Tram Open in Vietnam on Thursday.

The Indians are four strokes off the pace set by South Korea’s Charlie Wi, who established a course record of 62 for a two-shot first-round lead at the Bluffs Ho Tram Strip course. The 43-year-old Wi produced a superb 10-birdie round, including five-on-the-trot from the fourth hole.

Malaysia’s Nicholas Fung, fighting to make Team Asia for the EurAsia Cup against Europe next month, posted a 65 which was matched by reigning Asian Tour Order of Merit champion David Lipsky of the United States and Chinese Taipei’s Lin Wen-tang, who was the best scorer in the tougher afternoon session with prevailing gusty winds.

World number 12 Sergio Garcia of Spain and local hope Michael Tran were among those who carded a 66 to stay within striking reach at the Ho Tram Open, which is dubbed Asia’s Grandest Stage.

Bhullar went through a quiet front-nine with a birdie on the fifth and a bogey on the ninth hole. But he turned it in style in the back-nine with birdies on the 10th, 12th, 14th, 15th and 16th.

“It was actually easy out there. A lot of the flags were accessible. A lot of par fives were reachable in two. You can see the leaderboard that a lot of guys are taking advantage of that. The course is in great shape, probably one of the best we’ve played all year,” Bhullar told Asian Tour.

Gangjee also put up a strong display of seven bogeys against two birdies, as Himmat joined his compatriots with two closing birdies.

World No.12 Sergio Garcia of Spain, the top-ranked golfer in the Asian Tour event, and local hope Michael Tran shared the seventh spot with the Indians.

Two-time Asian Tour champion Jeev Milkha Singh (70) was the next best Indian performer as he was tied 46th, while Shiv Kapur and Arjun Atwal finished joint 62nd on even-par 71.

Jyoti Randhawa, the former Asian Tour champion, and S. Chikkarangappa were joint 75th on one-over 72, while Chiragh Kumar and Rashid Khan carded matching 73s to be tied 93rd.

Young golfers Khalin Joshi (77) and Shubhankar Sharma (78) struggled as they finished tied 111th and 114th respectively.

 

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