$ = R 8
£ = R 12.72
€ = R 10.89
Oil = $ 113.26
Gold = $ 1769.2
Last Update:
14:08 10 Nov 11
SPONSORED LINKS ›
Cars Online
Property Search
Online Dating
Pest Control
Old Mutual Invest
Local sleepovers
Book flights online!
Work money smarter
Wine of the Week
Win the Lottery
Go shopping!
Golf: Wisut, Sung On Top At Taiwan Masters
Thu, 18 Sep 2008 12:00
Thailand's Wisut Artjanawat and local hotshot Sung Mao-chang blasted
matching four-under-par 68s for the joint opening round lead at the
Mercuries Taiwan Masters on Thursday.
Wisut nailed five birdies against a lone dropped shot with a similar
performance by the 30-year-old Sung at the Taiwan Golf and Country
Club.
Myanmar's Zaw Moe fired a 69 and was tied for third with a group of
players including Thailand's Thaworn Wiratchant and Filipino pair
Antonio Lascuna and Juvic Pagunsan.
In-form Korean Ted Oh, who finished runner-up last year, shot a 70
and was in the mix in 11th place alongside defending champion Lu
Wen-teh of Taiwan.
Sung was pleased with his opening round performance which he hopes
will help rejuvenate his form this season.
"My game clicked when I was in Japan recently for the qualifying
school and I have carried that momentum here," said Sung, who turned
professional in 2003.
"My performance on the Asian Tour has not been good this year so I
hope for a change this week. My short game was steady as I had 29 putts
today. I feel really comfortable out there and I aim to improve on my
score tomorrow."
Wisut shared a similar sentiment thanks to solid driving at one of
Taiwan's oldest courses.
"I was driving it really well. I am quite confident with my short
game which also helped me shoot a good score today," said the
Bangkok-based golfer.
"I'm happy to be tied on top with Sung. It feels like I'm competing
at home when I am here because the Thai players have a special
friendship with Taiwan golfers.
"Lin Wen-tang won the Asian Tour International in Thailand and we
were all very happy for him. So I hope a Thai player will win over here
this week.
Thai star Thaworn took advantage of his strong iron play at the
Tamsui Course for a 69 after four birdies against a lone dropped shot.
"I always enjoy playing on old courses. This course has a
traditional layout and it suits my game as it is not too long and
requires a lot of thinking," said Thaworn, who won the Bangkok Airways
Open in June for a record 10th Asian Tour title.
Sapa-AFP
/jlb