Vegas
makes strong start, dizzy Kuchar battles in Canada
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[July 28, 2017]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Jhonattan Vegas responded
admirably from a double-bogey early in his back nine to get his
Canadian Open title defense off to a strong start on Thursday but
British Open runnerup Matt Kuchar had to battle through dizzy spells
in his opening round.
Vegas was cruising along the Glen Abbey Golf Course in Oakville,
Ontario, until his hiccup at the par-four 11th but he charged home
with four birdies over the next seven holes for a six-under-par 66
before the weather-hit opening round was suspended due to darkness.
That left the Venezuelan among a pack of 11 golfers one stroke back
of American co-leaders Hudson Swafford, Matt Every, Brandon Hagy,
Kevin Chappell and Ollie Schniederjans.
Level with Vegas were K.J. Choi, 2004 winner Vijay Singh and twice
U.S. Masters winner Bubba Watson, who enjoyed his first bogey-free
round of the season.
Another 15 golfers had yet to finish their round, including American
Kramer Hickok, who was five-under through 17 holes, and 19-year-old
Australian Ryan Ruffels, four-under through 16.
World number one Dustin Johnson was making his own charge with four
front-nine birdies but failed to find any consistency after a
two-hour rain delay that began right after his tee shot at the 10th
landed next to a parking lot.
Johnson, who said this week that he is still feeling the effect of
the freak back injury he suffered in April, ended up with a
five-under 67, only two strokes off the pace in a huge group tied
for 17th.
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Jhonattan Vegas hits his tee shot from the first tee during the
first round of the RBC Canadian Open golf tournament at Glen Abbey
Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports
Britain's Ian Poulter and Canadian Mackenzie Hughes,
who is looking to become the first homegrown champion since Pat
Fletcher in 1954, were also two behind the leaders.
Kuchar felt dizzy a couple of times during his round, including once
when he was marking a ball, and even met with an on-course medic.
"I had a couple of spells where I got a little bit dizzy and I felt
weak. I don't know where it came from," said Kuchar, who did not
blame jet lag after flying to Canada from England where he narrowly
missed out on a maiden major title.
"I've had plenty of time to get over the travel. Hopefully it's just
something that passes real quick."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Ian Ransom) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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