Mattiace and Jonzon lead in South Africa
Len Mattiace and Michael Jonzon shared the lead on seven-under-par after the opening round at the Alfred Dunhill Championship.
The pair shot 65s to lead by one from Lee Westwood, Robert Rock, Rafael Cabrera Bello and Johan Edfors â with three players on five under and 14, including 2004 champion Charl Schwartzel, three off the pace.
Swede Jonzon was especially impressive at the Leopard Creek Golf Club, with two birdies and an eagle in his opening four holes giving him a flying start.
Another birdie on the par-four sixth helped him complete the front nine in 30 - the lowest of the day â and he consolidated that performance with a 35 on the back nine to complete a bogey-free round.
âI played really, really well â especially my shots into the green where I found my speed and the lines on the greens,â he said.
âIt was just a day when you play really well. The weather in the afternoon was also nice. The wind died down and made it quite easy.
âItâs just sometimes that days like these happen. Itâs when you donât think about it when it does happen.â
American Mattiace, who lost a play-off to Mike Weir at the Masters in 2003, added: âI really wanted to get off to a good start today.
âI played in a tournament last week in Buenos Aires in Argentina and I really didnât get off to a good start.
âSo I wanted to go around and shoot a really low score and I really mapped it out and I stuck pretty well to what I thought I should do.
âI really challenged myself today. I donât know how the other scores look. Iâm sure there are going to be some pretty low ones because of the greens being soft.â
Britons Westwood and Rock set the earlier pace, the world number 10 looking solid during a round that included six birdies.
He said: âI played very solidly.
âI could have got off to a faster start; I missed a couple of good chances at my first two holes â but I drove the ball well.
âDistance control with the irons was good: I rolled quite a few decent putts in, and my short game was good.
âIf you played well today on the golf course, you got what you deserved. There were no tricks to it.â
Rock has good memories of the tournament, after finishing 14th and 17th in the last two years, and he is hoping to improve even further this time on what he described as âone of the best courses in the worldâ.
âAny tournament Iâve played in South Africa over the past few years, Iâve played all right,â he remembered.
âI donât really know why that is. But I think itâs just early in the calendar, and youâre keen to get off to a decent start.
âI think the course here is something that I really like, so Iâm always a little more excited than normal to come and play. That helps a little bit.
âIâve had two top-20 finishes so far here, and to go a little better will be nice. But thereâs a long way to go yet.
âItâs going to be really hot tomorrow and it might be a bit more hard work.â







