Sergio Garcia fired a superb eight-under-par opening-round 64 in the EPGA Nedbank Golf Challenge yesterday to take a four-shot lead at Sun City with star attraction Rory McIlroy eight behind.
Finn Mikko Korhonen, Mike Lorenzo-Vera from France and South African Charl Schwartzel share second place on 68.
“This sort of round does not happen very often, I was very fortunate,” said the 38-year-old Spanish winner of the 2017 Masters after his bogey-free round. 
While the two-time Sun City champion put his good fortune down to the vagaries of the wind not punishing him and some “bonus putts”, his round on a first visit to Sun City since 2013 was remarkable.
“This kind of round does not happen very often but I played very consistently and kept the ball in play,” said Garcia.
“This tricky wind moved all over the place and on one hole you could have three or four different winds.
“You have to just trust your shot and sometimes it goes wrong, but I was fortunate to get it right a lot of the time — to be bogey-free was really nice.
“I drove the ball nicely, hit a lot of fairways and greens, but it just does not happen on this course that you are going to hit the ball to two feet every time.
“I made three or four very good putts, those little bonuses that you do not expect to make. But I gave myself lots of chances, so then this leads to more birdies.”
Garcia’s error-free round was in stark contrast to that of world number six McIlroy, whose level-par 72 was characterised by some wayward driving.


‘Bad finish’
McIlroy’s front nine was promising with three birdies offset by just a single bogey, at the par-four third when his ball plugged just below the lip of a greenside bunker.
But after birdieing the par-four 13th, the four-time major winner twice drove into the bushes, leading to sixes at the par-five 14th and the par-four 17th.
“I actually played pretty nicely on the front nine but it was a bad, bad finish. The driver let me down a couple of times which left me out of position and led to a couple of big numbers.
“If I can tidy that up tomorrow I should be alright, but obviously I’m pretty disappointed right now,” said McIlroy.
In nine previous appearances at Sun City, 2011 Masters champion Schwartzel has had five top-10 finishes, including being runner-up to German Martin Kaymer in 2012.
“Everything’s good, the game is on the money and it is about as good as I have ever played,” he said after his 68.
“So I feel confident, but transferring that to playing well is a different thing. It’s been a very difficult year, so it is nice to play at home — that builds confidence and I’ll probably see some results soon.
“It was very difficult this morning, the wind was blowing a lot and the first few holes were straight into it.
“Making a good start is key on this course and I only made one bogey, on eight, when the wind turned, I actually hit a good shot but it was way short.”
Defending champion Branden Grace of South Africa opened with a 70.


Leading scores after Round I
64 — Sergio Garcia (ESP)
68 — Mikko Korhonen (FIN), Mike Lorenzo-Vera (FRA), Charl Schwartzel (RSA)
69 — Benjamin Hebert (FRA), Louis Oosthuizen (RSA), Jason Scrivener (AUS), Andy Sullivan (ENG), Matt Wallace (ENG), Ashun Wu (CHN)
70 — Ryan Fox (NZL), Branden Grace (RSA)
71 — Jorge Campillo (ESP), Ross Fisher (ENG), Matthew Fitzpatrick (ENG), Haotong Li (CHN), Shane Lowry (IRL), Andrea Pavan (ITA), Tapio Pulkkanen (FIN), Lee Westwood (ENG)
72 — Dean Burmester (RSA), Richard McEvoy (ENG), Rory McIlroy (NIR), Joakim Lagergren (SWE), Joost Luiten (NED), Chris Paisley (ENG), Renato Paratore (ITA), Aaron Rai (ENG), Matthias Schwab (AUT), Paul Waring (ENG)