Published on December 13, 2024
A total of 21 players advanced out of Friday’s opening round of LIV Golf Promotions, including Jon Rahm’s former college roommate, rising stars from Brazil and Hong Kong, and one golfer playing with borrowed clubs.
Those 21 players now join 28 others who received exemptions into Friday’s second round at Riyadh Golf Club. The leaderboard will be reset, with the top 20 players (no ties) advancing to Saturday’s 36-hole final day. The Promotions winner earns a spot in the 2025 LIV Golf League, while the top 10 and ties receive exemptions into all International Series events next year.
Korea’s Jeunghun Wang, playing in the final group Thursday, birdied his last hole to top the first-round leaderboard with a seven-under-par 64. “Some lucky shots went in, including some long putts, which helped me play well heading into tomorrow,” Wang said.
Five players shared second by shooting 65, with nine players shooting 66. The final six players advanced on the cutline number by shooting 67s, eliminating the remaining 43 players from the tournament.
Hong Kong’s rising star, 24-year-old Taichi Kho, was among the group at six under, his round highlighted by an eagle at the par-five 15th after a 355-yard drive. Kho also advanced from the first round at last year’s Promotions tournament before being eliminated in the second round.
“Last year I couldn’t get past the fact that it was a clean reset after round one,” Kho said. “I remember last year I had a great first round as well, and I felt like I carried on some of those thoughts and feelings as I would do a regular tournament going into the second round …
“Going into tomorrow, it’s important for me to just understand it’s a completely new day.”
Germany’s Max Rottluff also shot six-under, with five birdies in his last seven holes. Rottluff played collegiately at Arizona State, where he was the roommate of Jon Rahm, the Legion XIII captain who won the 2024 Individual Championship in his first LIV Golf season. Another roommate was Alberto Sanchez, who is the caddie of Fireballs GC’s David Puig.
“We still talk quite a bit and whatnot, so it would be a dream come true to join those guys,” said Rottluff, who credits Rahm with inspiring him to continue his golf career.
“I was considering giving it up back at the end of ’22, and I spent a week with him, and that really kind of straightened out my head and went out and won two times that year on the Challenge Tour,” said the 31-year-old Rottluff. “Kind of went back on a better trajectory again.”
South Africa’s Ian Snyman, another player who shot 65, already has a taste of LIV Golf. He played for Cleeks GC in the first two tournaments held during the inaugural 2022 season. He’s remained in touch with members of the all-South African Stinger GC team.
“I’ve been talking to Charl [Schwartzel] and Gracey [Branden Grace] and asking how things have changed over the last two years,” Snyman said. “It’s exciting. It’s something we all want to be part of. I like the team aspect.
“That’s why we’re here. That’s why we’re giving it a shot, and we’ll see what happens.”
Mexico’s 22-year-old Jose Islas, who turned pro earlier this year and recently won two events on his home country’s tour, is among the group shooting 66. Islas’s round, which included five consecutive birdies, was manufactured from borrowed clubs from his caddie’s friend after his own equipment failed to arrive in Riyadh.
Although the clubs are the same manufacture (Titleist), they’re a completely different model than his usual blade irons. Even so, he holed an eagle shot from 165 yards during a practice round and will continue to rely on them if his own clubs don’t show up. He planned to go to the airport after his round to check on their status.
“I think it’s not about the clubs, it’s more about how I thought the shots that I was going to hit, so I was with no expectations at all,” Islas said. “I think that’s why it really worked.”
Brazil’s Fred Biondi, the 2023 NCAA Individual Champion from Florida’s winning team, posted a bogey-free 66, as did Spain’s 21-year-old Luis Masaveu, a former U.S. Amateur semifinalist.
The hottest group on Thursday was the threesome of Ireland’s Mark Power (66), Spain’s Borja Virto (66) and England’s David Horsey (67), with all three players advancing.
“The round has a nice feeling,” Virto said. “Sometimes if one of the guys is struggling a lot, it can maybe not bother you, but it doesn’t feel as nice as all three of us playing well together and making it through to the next round.”
“A positive round,” said Power, a member of the 2023 Walker Cup team. “Everyone is in good spirits.”
Veteran American players Bo Hoag and Ollie Schniederjans also advanced, with Hoag shooting a bogey-free 65 and Schniederjans making it on the number with a 67.
“I’ve actually never played overseas, so it was something new for me,” said the 36-year-old Hoag. “Long flight over here.”
If Hoag finishes first this week, he’ll have plenty of opportunities to travel in 2025 during LIV Golf’s global schedule. “I think it would be fun,” he said.
Courtesy LIV Golf.
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