Gros refuses to be blown off course at 30th BMW International Open.

Cologne. With high winds putting the whole of the 156-man
field to the test, Sébastien Gros emerged as a worthy leader after
the first round of the 30th BMW International Open at Golf Club Gut
Lärchenhof today. 

 

The 28-year-old Frenchman had a four-under-par round of 68 for a lead
of one stroke over four others – Scott Jamieson (SCO), Aaron Rai
(ENG), Henric Sturehed (SWE) and Jorge Campillo (ESP).

 

Gros made light of difficult conditions to reach the turn in 32, with
four birdies and five pars, and came home in 36, with his only dropped
shot coming at the par-three 16th. In total, only 22 players broke par
for the round. “That was a great round,” Gros said. “It was brutal
with the wind and tough to keep the ball on the fairway.  I’ll try to
take confidence from this and keep it going for the rest of the week.”

 

Further down the leaderboard, but certain to mount a strong challenge
as the week progresses, are three of four major champions in the field
– Ernie Els (RSA), Martin Kaymer (GER) and Sergio Garcia (ESP).

 

Els finished on one under par, after a hard-fought 71, and lies one
stroke ahead of Kaymer and two ahead of Garcia. With 54 holes still to
play, those ahead of the trio will be looking anxiously over their shoulders.

 

“It was always going to be a tough day,” Garcia said. “It’s very
windy, the course is playing a lot firmer than in the past, and the
rough is quite thick. It’s a lot more challenging because you have to
be so precise with your shots.

“It wasn’t an easy day, but I felt like I played better than one over
par. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get anything going.  Overall, there
were positives to take from the round and hopefully I’ll have a better
round tomorrow and can then look forward to a good weekend.”

 

Kaymer, who finished the day as the third-best placed German in the
field – behind Nicolai von Dellingshausen (70) and Max Kieffer (71) –
was relatively satisfied with a hard day’s work. “Anything around par
was acceptable today,” he said. “It was a bit of an up-and-down round,
with plenty of bogeys and lots of birdies. In the end, par is okay. It
is never easy when the wind gets up. There were a few holes where the
pins were in tricky positions on the side of the green from which the
wind was blowing.”

 

One player looking for an upturn in fortunes is Tommy Fleetwood, who
produced the performance of his career when finishing runner-up at the
U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills on Sunday after a championship
record-equalling final round of 63.

 

Jetlag and fatigue finally seemed to catch up with the reigning
European No.1, but the Englishman is by no means out of the running
after a roller coaster round of 74 that was made up of four birdies,
one double bogey, four bogeys and nine pars. There is still plenty to
play for.