DP World Tour Championship, Dubai R1

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Lorenzo-Vera one clear of McIlroy in Dubai
Posted on
November 21, 2019
by
The Editorial Team in ,
Estimated reading time: 8 minutes

November 21-24
Jumeirah Golf Estates, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
US$8,000,000
Live leaderboard
Round 2, Round 3, Round 4


France's Mike Lorenzo-Vera finished with four consecutive birdies in an opening round of 63 to take a one shot lead over four-time Major winner Rory McIlroy in the European Tour's season-ending DP World Tour Championship, Dubai.

DP WTC Dubai R1 - Lorenzo-Vera one clear of McIlroy
Credit: Getty Images

Despite feeling โ€˜under the weather', Lorenzo-Vera equalled his lowest round of the season to set the early pace on nine under par in the final Rolex Series event of 2019 and even held a three-shot advantage at one point until McIlroy produced his own spectacular finish.

โ€œHonestly I'm not the feeling well at all. I have no energy. I was down, I had a lung infection in South Africa and a lot of treatment, and really just feel bad on top of that.

โ€œJust one of those days where you try to put the ball in play. I played four holes yesterday as practise, and I felt that if I really relaxed a lot, just swing it, like 70 per cent or maybe less, ball was still flying pretty well.


โ€œWell, nothing's clicking, really. I'm just trying to do well in every part of the performance and sometimes it clicks and sometimes it doesn't click. I have a lot to do better to be more consistent on good weeks. That's why I think I haven't won yet. There's plenty of work to do.โ€

Former World Number One McIlroy birdied the 15th and 16th holes then executed his โ€˜best shot of the year' on the last, a majestic three wood from 290 yards which finished five feet from the pin, en route to a closing eagle. The Northern Irishman, who also posted five birdies on the front nine, carded an eight under par 64 as he chases back-to-back European Tour victories following his win in the WGC-HSBC Champions three weeks ago.

โ€œIt was great. I started off fast at four under through six, five under through seven. I held a couple of really good putts starting off, but I birdied the two par fives on the front nine and did what I needed to do. Then it got a little slow around the start of the back nine, but it was obviously nice to finish the way I did. I hit some really quality shots coming in which gives me a lot confidence going into the next few days.

โ€œHonestly it's possibly the best shot I've hit all year. I had the equivalent 272 to the front, 291 to the pin, sort of back in off the left. Wind was off the left so it was a nice one for me to just aim straight at the pin and know if I hit my little draw it should hold but if it gets going on the wind, obviously the bunker on the right is better than the water on the left. I just flushed it.

โ€œWhen I was over it, it was sort of enough left and I sort of carried my three wood off the deck about 280, so it was right on the limit but as soon as I hit it, I knew it was perfect. It was right out of the middle. Great to finish like that, and yeah, it was a great round of golf."


Both players will have their eyes on the title and the $3million winner's cheque โ€“ the richest first prize in tournament golf โ€“ while Jon Rahm has that and the Race to Dubai title in his sights after opening with a six under par 66. The Spaniard is currently third in the tournament and third in the Race to Dubai, and he bolstered his chances of overhauling Bernd Wiesberger in the contest to become European's Number One with four birdies on the back nine.

โ€œReally good," said Rahm, "even though I tried my best to mess it up on the last hole. Really good round. Six weeks of not competing, out of all those six weeks, most of the five were not touching a club. Pleased with the way I'm performing. I could tell how rested I was mentally because on some holes, I never lost patience, I never really got down on myself and stayed with that positive attitude. I'm hoping I can keep playing solid and keep it for the next three days.

โ€œIt was hard to kind of stop golf for a while, and then after a certain time, it was hard to pick it up again. So it was hard to get into that routine again but once I came to the tournament, you kind of switch, you get to the tournament, you get to grinding. I think it's just getting the feel of putting, chipping, so I spent a lot of time doing that, a lot of short game, putting. The swing, I was feeling good, so all I had to do was make sure my pace was fast greens was good. So far it's been good.โ€


England's Tommy Fleetwood also put the pressure on Race to Dubai leader Wiesberger โ€“ his playing partner in the opening round โ€“ by holing his second shot on the first hole for an eagle and birdieing the second. The Ryder Cup player eventually signed for a five under par round of 67 to sit four shots back in a share of fourth place with compatriot Tom Lewis. 

โ€œYou can only put yourself out of it on day one. There's a lot more to do. There's 54 holes now. There are great players up there and all I can do is do my stuff," acknowledged Fleetwood. "I've got three days of work left really until the end of the year. Just make the most of them. Stay very present. Keep doing my best on every golf shot and see how we can get on. I would love to be up there come Sunday but that's a very long way away. I've got a little bit of practice tonight, have dinner and on to tomorrow.

โ€œVery nice start. Hit a great drive and then I actually didn't expect the nine to reach the pin. I knew it would be so close. You can't see it, so you just take people's reaction, but it was the perfect start. I didn't feel too up or down. I was just happy with the execution of the golf shots. It's nice, last event of the year, only four days left, so make the most of a good start.


Wiesberger is a further three shots adrift but the Austrian, who was one over par after his third bogey of the day on the tenth hole, was rightly pleased with his back nine after birdies on the 11th, 13th and 18th holes moved him back into the red on two under par and into a share of 14th position. 

โ€œI put myself in tricky positions today. Had a lot of sand off the tee, unfortunately, and couldn't attack, even though conditions were a little bit windy it's still gettable. There's low scoring. Again like last week, I came off a sloppy start and we hung in there and shot a couple under par, so that's a positive.

โ€œIt's good. I try to cherish it as much as I can. I'm just thinking 72-hole tournament this week. I'm not trying to look at what is happening. I can't control what Tommy, Matt, Shane and Jon are doing or any other of the 49 guys. So whatever is in my control, I try to do as good as possible, and I've done pretty well with that this year and no reason to change that.

โ€œI'm trying to play for a tournament here and I'm trying to play for the Race to Dubai title, and if I do my very best to finish this tournament as high as possible, that's all I can do. We'll add it up at the end.โ€


Pos.
Player
Nat
To Par
R1
1
Michael Lorenzo-Vera
FRA
-9
63
2
Rory McIlroy
NIR
-8
64
3
Jon Rahm
ESP
-6
66
T4
Tom Lewis
ENG
-5
67
T4
Tommy Fleetwood
ENG
-5
67
T6
Rafael Cabrera Bello
ESP
-4
68
T6
Marcus Kinhult
SWE
-4
68
T8
Thomas Detry
BEL
-3
69
T8
Justin Rose
ENG
-3
69
T8
Francesco Molinari
ITA
-3
69
T8
Haotong Li
CHN
-3
69
T8
Danny Willett
ENG
-3
69
T8
Matthias Schwab
AUT
-3
69
T14
Andy Sullivan
ENG
-2
70
T14
Thomas Pieters
BEL
-2
70
T14
Adria Arnaus
ESP
-2
70
T14
Benjamin Hebert
FRA
-2
70
T14
Louis Oosthuizen
RSA
-2
70
T14
Matt Wallace
ENG
-2
70
T14
Bernd Wiesberger
AUT
-2
70
T21
Richard Sterne
RSA
-1
71
T21
Jason Scrivener
AUS
-1
71
T21
Sergio Garcia
ESP
-1
71
T21
Romain Langasque
FRA
-1
71
T21
Paul Waring
ENG
-1
71
T21
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
RSA
-1
71
T21
Kurt Kitayama
USA
-1
71
T21
Robert MacIntyre
SCO
-1
71
T21
Erik Van Rooyen
RSA
-1
71
T21
Matthew Fitzpatrick
ENG
-1
71
T31
Mikko Korhonen
FIN
Par
72
T31
David Lipsky
USA
Par
72
T33
Guido Migliozzi
ITA
1
73
T33
Lee Westwood
ENG
1
73
T33
Paul Casey
ENG
1
73
T33
Justin Harding
RSA
1
73
T33
Jorge Campillo
ESP
1
73
T33
Victor Perez
FRA
1
73
T33
Tyrrell Hatton
ENG
1
73
T33
Shane Lowry
IRL
1
73
T41
Joachim B. Hansen
DEN
2
74
T41
Jordan Smith
ENG
2
74
T41
Henrik Stenson
SWE
2
74
T41
Patrick Reed
USA
2
74
T41
Joost Luiten
NED
2
74
T41
Ian Poulter
ENG
2
74
T47
Matthew Southgate
ENG
3
75
T47
Aaron Rai
ENG
3
75
49
Scott Hend
AUS
4
76
50
Andrea Pavan
ITA
5
77
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