Jones takes one-stroke lead in Australian Open

By AFP
December 07, 2019

SYDNEY: Leader Matt Jones complained of stinging eyes and trouble breathing as smoke from raging bushfires descended on the Australian Open golf competition for the second day running on Friday.

Advertisement

Jones birdied the final hole for a one-stroke lead over England’s Paul Casey as the players struggled through another day of smoke haze.

World number 14 Casey, the highest-ranked player in the field, led for much of the day after a sparkling six-under-par 65.

But Jones, who won the tournament in 2015, dropped a tricky putt on the last to be 10-under for the tournament after his first-round 67.

Another Australian, Dimitrios Papadatos, was alongside Casey one shot back.

Five others, including South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen and Japanese amateur Takumi Kanaya, the joint overnight leader, were two behind Jones, who has won twice on the PGA Tour but not since 2015. A wind change helped lift some of the toxic smoke from bushfires blazing across New South Wales in the morning before beginning to return as the day wore on.

“As you can tell by the voice the smoke has got to me a little bit,” croaked Jones. “It’s not the easiest to breathe, our eyes have definitely been stinging quite a bit. But any time you get to lead is fantastic. It would have been better to be more than one in front, but I’ll take one.”

World number 15 Adam Scott, who will be playing the Presidents Cup against Tiger Woods’ US team next week, missed the cut despite firing a 67 as his first round of 75 cost him dearly.

His Presidents Cup International team skipper Ernie Els shot a 77 and will also miss the final two days, allowing him to focus on the task ahead next week at Royal Melbourne. Former Masters champion Sergio Garcia was another to fall short of the cut. Casey, who has won twice this year, at the PGA Tour’s Valspar Championship and the European Open, said he was finally finding his range.

“I don’t know if I was fully in the zone but it was really nice stuff and it felt really good,” he said, after mixing seven birdies with a single bogey. “Suddenly from a case of sort of bumbling around, just a couple under par, challenging for lead, so good stuff.”

The 42-year-old added that he was in Sydney to win, as he targets the rare feat of wins on three different tours in a single season. “Two victories this year, I’d love to have a third and that would be on three different tours, which would be pretty cool. I don’t think I’ve done that before,” he said.

Advertisement