Fast finish puts Van Pelt up by two at Mayakoba Classic

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Birdies on three of his final four holes Thursday had Bo Van Pelt in the pink.
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Feb. 26, 2009

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico (AP) -- Bo Van Pelt birdied seven of his last nine holes for a 7-under 63 and the first-round lead at the Mayakoba Golf Classic on Thursday.

He started the run with four straight birdies, then birdied three of the final four holes, including about a 2-foot putt to close the round in style.

"I played pretty aggressive," Van Pelt said. "No matter what I was hitting, it was going straight."

Inside the Numbers
Van Pelt thru 18 Holes
Category Total Rank
Eagles 0 N/A
Birdies 8 1
Pars 9 T104
Bogeys 1 T108
Double Bogeys 0 N/A
Other 0 N/A
Driving Accuracy 71.4% T56
Driving Distance 293.5 yds. T50
Greens in Regulation 72.2% T18
Putts per Round 24.0 T1
Putts per GIR 1.462 2
Sand Saves 100.0% T1

Chris Riley and Jarrod Lyle opened with 65s. Rookie Scott Piercy, who has three top-25 finishes in four starts this year, was in a group at 66.

Defending champion Brian Gay was tied for 20th at 68. David Toms -- the world's 65th-ranked player, leaving him one spot from making the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play field -- shot a 70.

From the start, Van Pelt was accurate off the tee, which is a must to handle the tight fairways on the Greg Norman-designed course. His putter was another story.

Although Van Pelt came out early to try getting the speed down on the practice green, he didn't find it until a par-saving putt on No. 18, his ninth hole.

"That was pretty much the key," he said. After that, "I just started making some."

Van Pelt birdied the par-5 first hole and the par-3 second, then faced a big test -- a 462-yard, par-4 that was the 22nd-toughest hole on the entire PGA TOUR last year. He birdied that hole and the next, too.

After a par on No. 5, he bounced back with two more birdies. He parred No. 8, but there's no shame in that; it was the 32nd-toughest on TOUR last year and yielded the fewest birdies over the brief history of this tournament.

On his final hole, Van Pelt smacked a drive right down the middle, only to find that it stopped in a divot.

"I was just trying to hit a solid wedge shot -- and it came out just how I wanted," he said. Then came the bonus of watching someone else in his group putt along his same line, making a short putt even easier.

Van Pelt matched the lowest score of his career, although the other was an 8-under round, and grabbed a first-round lead for the fourth time in his career. He's hoping to parlay it into his first PGA TOUR victory.

His best finish was a tie for second in Puerto Rico last year. He's done pretty well this season, having tied for fifth at the Bob Hope Classic and tied for 30th last week at the Northern Trust Open, closing that tournament with a 65.

"I feel like I've been playing a little better than my scores," he said. "Last week, I was frustrated because I wasn't making any putts, then finally on Sunday I did. I shot 6 under and didn't have any bogeys."

Van Pelt's closing nine of 28 on Thursday was a tournament record for either nine. His 63 was two off the tournament record at the 6,923-yard, par-70 El Camaleon Course.

Riley is among the players who've been here every all three years and he said the gusts Thursday were the strongest yet. That apparently suits him because it was his best score yet, too. He got a boost by holing a 130-yard wedge shot for an eagle.

"I love to play in the wind because I hit the ball low," said Riley, who has tied for 18th and 22nd at this tournament. "A low ball flight is pretty good here. ... You see the guys who've won here in the past -- Brian Gay and Fred Funk -- they're pretty straight down the middle, there's no length or anything like that."

Also fitting in nicely in that pack at 66 was Pablo Larrazabal of Spain, last year's European Tour rookie of the year. He birdied his first two holes and four of the first seven, but was slowed by a pair of bogeys on the back nine. His success would certainly make proud tournament sponsor OHL, which is based in Spain.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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