Fitzpatrick, Garcia-Heredia share early lead in Crans Montana

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Alex Fitzpatrick, who is still awaiting his first DP World Tour victory, is heading in the right direction as he led a logjam at the top of the leaderboard at Crans-sur-Sierre Golf Club. Photo: Getty Images

Alex Fitzpatrick and Spaniard Alfredo Garcia-Heredia produced flawless rounds of 63 to share the first-round lead at the Omega European Masters.

Related: Matt Fitzpatrick targets historic win in Crans Montana

Both were among the late starters who benefited from the calmer conditions in the Swiss Alps, with Fitzpatrick rolling in seven birdies during his bogey-free card on Thursday.

He is the younger brother of former U.S. Open Champion Matt Fitzpatrick, who has lifted the trophy here at Crans Montana on two occasions in 2017 and 2018.

 

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Fitzpatrick, who is still awaiting his first DP World Tour victory, is heading in the right direction as he led a logjam at the top of the leaderboard at Crans-sur-Sierre Golf Club.

However, he was not on his own as Garcia-Heredia timed his charge to the summit to perfection as he rolled in an eagle and five birdies to reach seven under to sit alongside the Englishman.

The pair are one clear of a chasing pack which includes Matt Wallace, Swede Henrik Norlander, Australia’s Jason Scrivener and Dutchman Daan Huizing.

Wallace, who endured difficult wet conditions in the morning, went out in 32 and came home with the same score in his bogey-free 64 to set the clubhouse target before being usurped by Fitzpatrick and Garcia-Heredia.

 

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Norlander mixed an eagle, five birdies and a dropped shot to climb to six under, Scrivener picked up seven shots and a bogey, while a bogey at the eighth – his penultimate hole – saw Huizing slip back from the leading group.

German duo Jannik De Bruyn and Nicolai Von Dellingshausen, South African Brandon Stone, Welshman Stuart Manley, local amateur Nicola Gerhardsen and 2012 Champion Richie Ramsay sit two off the pace at five under.

Player quotes 

Alex Fitzpatrick: I played really nicely. The first five or six holes were fairly brutal, I think it was gusting at 25-30mph or whatever it was. I got the nice side of the draw to be honest, this morning was brutal and luckily the last eight or nine holes there was not much wind so it was nice to capitalise on the opportunities I had and hopefully the same tomorrow.

We made a change of club from a seven wood to three iron before the round just because of the conditions and I didn’t like drawing the three iron so last hole didn’t suit my eye but happy to hole a really nice putt and move on to tomorrow. After playing well last year, I feel like I know the course fairly well.

I took a really nice two and half week break not too long ago and I felt that really refreshed me for the rest of the year. The past couple of weeks have been nice, just got off to really slow starts so it’s nice to get one up early.

Alfredo Garcia-Heredia: I played really solid. You know I got lucky with the draw, no rain, a little bit windy, but I played really solid on the par fives, hitting greens, my irons were good. It was one of those rounds were everything flows.

Especially the first five or six holes, it was windy and cold, normally the ball here flies quite a bit and you have to adjust that, and the pins were kind of tight on some holes, so if you miss on the wrong side no chance, but if you hit greens you are going to have chances.

My putting has really improved since BMW International, my strength in the game is normally playing solid with my driving irons, the weakness has been my putting, but the last few weeks everything was off except the putter, so this week we were working with my coach the last couple weeks and my game looks back on track.

Matt Wallace: Tough, I’ve never played this golf course like that. Not being able to get near the ninth hole, not even reach the first bunker which you would easily make and this is the sixth time I’ve been here so for that to happen it’s different.

Cold, wet. It was okay in spells for about five holes where it was just windy, but it is a great test and it’s difficult because they are so many numbers in your head. You think ‘it’s colder, it’s raining’, it’s tough. Mentally a hard challenge, but I was really happy with my performance today.

The shot into eight, my second-last hole, that was all down to him (caddie Jamie Lane). I wanted to hit a nine iron, a bit safer and use the wind, and he just said a 160 (yard) eight iron was absolutely perfect. It came out great and gave ourselves another chance so credit to him there.

We were just focused today. We’ve got high focus, we are playing well. It’s a nice start to the week, we didn’t have a great start last week (at the Betfred British Masters hosted by Sir Nick Faldo), so this this is different.