Published on January 30, 2025
Eugenio Chacarra shot a stunning second nine six-under-par 30, that included an eagle on his penultimate hole, to take the clubhouse lead early on the opening day of the International Series India presented by DLF.
The Spaniard fired a four-under-par 68 to lead from Filipino Justin Quiban and Danthai Boonma from Thailand, who, playing together, returned 70s at DLF Golf and Country Club – one of the toughest courses on Tour, where par is a good score on every hole.
Chacarra initially battled to get to grips with DLF on his first nine, which is the second nine as he started on 10. He made a triple bogey seven on 13 and then a bogey on the following hole. However, he then showed why he is considered to be one of the most exciting young players in the game by making three successive birdies. He dropped a shot on 18 before a stunning homeward half, made up of that eagle, four birdies and no dropped shots.
“It feels good to be back,” said the 24-year-old, already a winner on the Asian Tour at the 2023 St Andrews Bay Championship, also part of The International Series.
“I’ve been grinding on my body, on my game, and it’s been a great off season. I mean I was four over through four, I feel like I didn’t even miss a shot. I mean, the first three holes, I had three good looks for birdie, and I was even par.
“Then I hit a good iron that bounced, I think it hit asprinkler head or something. It almost went by the fence, and I made a seven without any bad shots. But I still came back.”
Quiban also had an eagle to thank for helping to finish under par – something that not many will do today.
His came on the par-four sixth where he holed a gap wedge from 122 yards. It landed two feet above the cup and spun in.
He said: “It’s a tough, tough, course. One of the hardest we play. You can’t really chill out here, not at all. Yeah, you have to have full focus every shot. Never played here before. I’m happy with anything in the red, of course.”
Quiban hung onto his playing card last year, finishing 54th on the Asian Tour Order of Merit, which took a huge weight of his shoulders.
“Last year, it was a battle. Honestly, yes, just, I wasn’t really hitting it well, but I was just really, just trying to use my experience to keep myself in the top 65 Yeah, good thing I did.”
Boonma has come into the week after a solid joint eighth performance in last week’s Smart Infinity Philippine Open – the season-opening event on the Asian Tour. Four birdies and two bogies saw him make the kind of start he was looking for in the star-studded US$2million event.
“I feel pretty good today,” said the Thai, a two-time winner on the Asian Tour, the most recent being the Bangladesh Open in 2022.
“I’m really happy with my score today because I played with no expectation because it’s a tough course and that’s what make me play comfortably. Playing shot by shot and just keeping the momentum. That’s it.”
Sweden’s Charlie Lindh is the next best placed in the clubhouse with a 71 – one of only four to break par after the morning session.
Most of the big-name players are playing in the afternoon, including American Bryson DeChambeau, who made the turn on four under.
Play was delayed by an hour at the start of the day due to fog, meaning many will not be able to complete their first round today.
This week’s inaugural event is the first leg of the 2025 International Series.
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