Shubhankar Sharma and Gaganjeet Bhullar had contrasting starts at the Olympic golf competition, with Sharma tied 29th and Bhullar tied 56th after a heavily disrupted opening round at Le Golf National.
Paris: Amid thunder and lightning at the Par-71 Le Golf National course on Thursday, the Indian duo of Shubhankar Sharma and Gaganjeet Bhullar delivered contrasting performances in a heavily disrupted opening round of the Olympic golf competition.
While Sharma carded a topsy-turvy one-under 70 to lie tied 29th, Bhullar was way down at tied 56th in the 60-strong field after a four-over 75, which included a quadruple bogey.
Sharma was three-under through the front nine and it included an eagle, but he dropped shots after that. When play resumed after the first stoppage, Sharma was two-under through 15.
After he had played two more holes and also dropped a bogey to become one-under, there was second suspension due to lightening.
When played resumed yet again, he parred the last hole for a card of one-under 70. He was Tied-29th alongside Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland and Keita Nakajima, who won the Hero Indian Open earlier this year.
Hideki Matsuyama, who could not hide his disappointment when he missed a chance to bring in a medal at home in the Tokyo Olympics when he lost in a seven-man play-off for the bronze medal, grabbed the early lead with a bogey free eight-under 63.
Close behind Matsuyama was the defending Olympic champion, Xander Schauffele, who comes in with two Majors in his bag from 2024. Schauffele was seven-under but dropped a bogey on the Par-four 17th and finished at 6-under 75.
Three players — Tom Kim of Korea, Chile’s Joaquim Niemann and Argentine Emilio Grillo — are at tied third with 66 each.
World number one Scottie Scheffler, one of the four Americans in the field, was four-under, Spaniard Jon Rahm (67) and seven others were tied sixth with 67. Rory McIlroy (68) was tied 15th.
Sharma, making his Olympic debut, had a par start followed by an eagle as he hit two great shots on the Par-five third. He smashed a 294-yard drive down the centre and drilled his second shot to 24 feet and holed it for an eagle.
His driving and putting looked good on a course, where he has played often in the past on the DP World Tour.
Things did not pan out well for Bhullar, as he began bogey-bogey and that included a penalty drop on the first. Bhullar fought back superbly with three birdies in next four holes to get to one-under.
Then came the crippling quadruple bogey on the par-four seventh, where he took a penalty and then a provisional and finally three-putted for a seven.
That did considerable damage, though he did pick a birdie on the 10th. He closed with bogeys on the 16th and the 18th for a 75.
The 60 players will all play four rounds at Le Golf National in a stroke play format. In case of any ties for those behind the winner, there will be play-offs for the medals.