NewsBite

Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley starts well at Queensland Open

Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley made a late move to share the lead on a rain-disrupted opening day at the Isuzu Queensland Open.

Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley made a late move to share the lead on the opening day at Queensland Open. Picture: Evan Morgan
Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley made a late move to share the lead on the opening day at Queensland Open. Picture: Evan Morgan

Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley made a late move to share the lead on a rain-disrupted opening day at the Isuzu Queensland Open.

Morley, 25, was five-under-par with five birdies through 16 holes before fading light forced half the field off the course.

He will finish his final two holes from 7am (AEST) on Friday before a break and head out for his second round.

Morley will be delighted because he sustained his round.

New island swim test to make a splash

How to activate your free Courier Mail subscription

Caloundra amateur Chris Crabtree had a hot round going on his home course too.

He was five-under after eight holes but pulling his tee shot into trees on his 16th hole for double bogey and a triple bogey from the trees on the last scuttled things.

Mudjimba‘s Shae Wools-Cobb was even-par through 14 holes when forced off.

Australian golf’s man-of-the-moment Andrew Martin produced a five-birdie streak at the Queensland Open as his encore to last Sunday’s four eagles.

It was a remarkable show of focus from the Bendigo pro who would have been excused if he had a let-down round after waiting so long for his breakthrough tournament success.

Instead, he carried the stellar form of his closing 61 to win The Players Series Sydney into a fine five-under-par 67 for the joint lead.

Queensland veteran Michael Wright, Newcastle’s Blake Windred, 2015 Queensland Open champion David Bransdon and Morley share the frontrunning on five-under with him.

Half the field failed to finish their rounds because of a near-three hour play suspension on Thursday morning when a Queensland downpour saturated the course outside Caloundra.

Martin had two safe pars behind him when rain forced the morning field off the course and he trundled to eight straight before his round exploded.

He had a run of six birdies in eight holes and five in a row. There were no chip-ins this time just more solid ball-striking and putting.

“I was a bit sluggish after the rain delay but five in a row does help,” the understated Martin said.

He drained a superb 12m left-to-right putt that accounted for a fair bit of grain on the par three fifth, his 14th hole of the day.

Keeping his focus was easier than you’d expect.

“We have NSW Open next week and a fair bit of time off after that so it’s knuckle down time when I’m playing good golf. I can enjoy things afterwards,” Martin said.

Bransdon joked that he’s glad he can still play golf because he has no future as a homeschool teacher for his youngest children James, 8, and Olivia, 11.

“I did two lots of homeschooling for 10 weeks during the Victorian lockdown (for COVID) last year and I’m definitely better at golf,” he said.

Bransdon clearly enjoys the positional golf and the strong iron play that Greg Norman-designed courses demand.

He won this event at Norman’s Brookwater Golf and Country Club in 2015 and set the Pelican Waters course record of 63 in last year’s opening round.

“I only took out driver four times. It’s a course that demands good iron play and that plays to my strength,” Bransdon said.

Windred, 23, made his fifth and final birdie with a fine up-and-down from the compact wet sand in the bunker on the par five 17th.

He hit a six iron to just over a metre on the fifth with “some of the heaviest rain I’ve played in coming down and a wet glove.”

He had nearly three hours to dwell on that putt for his first birdie because he was called off course at that point.

“I actually didn’t think about the putt so I just went out and...yeah, sunk it,” Windred said.

“It can be a dark place mentally on rainy days like this when you don’t know what sort of play is going to be possible.

“An egg and bacon McMuffin and a latte definitely helped during the rain break and some joking with the other guys. It felt like I was starting my round again.”

Defending champion Anthony Quayle (68) had a composed round, Jake McLeod (70) felt his round was ragged and Dalby leftie Lawry Flynn (68) was best of the strong amateur contingent.

Steph Kyriacou, who started birdie-birdie, and young amateur Grace Kim both shot two-over 74 on a day when the sodden course played at its longest off the back tees.

Originally published as Pelican Waters amateur Justin Morley starts well at Queensland Open

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/sunshine-coast/sport/pelican-waters-amateur-justin-morley-starts-well-at-queensland-open/news-story/965fa7b92e126dde28b4f71e00db099b