Andrey Pavlov hits nightmare score of 17 on first hole at Lyoness Open,Gregory Bourdy enlarged his lead at the Lyoness Open on Friday by shooting a 5-under 67, while Andrey Pavlov required 17 strokes on a solitary opening in brilliant climate conditions.
Bourdy took a four-stroke lead over individual Frenchman Gary Stal and Chris Wood of England. Looking for his fifth European Tour title, Bourdy caught up his 65 from Thursday with five birdies on his front nine preceding dropping his first stroke of the week. He's at 12-under 132 at the halfway stage.Stal checked five birdies on his way to a 68, while Wood had two fizzles on the front nine to run with five birdies for a 69.
Spanish pair Carlos Pigem and Rafa Cabrera-Bello shared fourth, another stroke off the lead.
Previous champion Bernd Wiesberger, at No. 37 the most astounding positioned player in the field, shot a 67 yet missed the cut after his 79 from the first day.
A year ago's champ Mikael Lundberg of Sweden shot a 70 to trail pioneer Bourdy by 10 strokes.
Prior, Pavlov's 17 tied for the second-most noticeably awful score on the European Tour.
On the standard 5 to begin with, the 28-year-old Russian discovered the water on six endeavors. The Diamond Country Club course is known for its numerous water perils.
Chris Gane likewise scored a 17 at Gleneagles 12 years back, still three strokes not exactly Philippe Porquier's record of 20 at the French Open in 1978.
In the wake of entering the occasion on welcome, the 1,598th-positioned Pavlov opened with a 71 and looked set to make his first cut on the European Tour before completing at 17 over.
Bourdy took a four-stroke lead over individual Frenchman Gary Stal and Chris Wood of England. Looking for his fifth European Tour title, Bourdy caught up his 65 from Thursday with five birdies on his front nine preceding dropping his first stroke of the week. He's at 12-under 132 at the halfway stage.Stal checked five birdies on his way to a 68, while Wood had two fizzles on the front nine to run with five birdies for a 69.
Spanish pair Carlos Pigem and Rafa Cabrera-Bello shared fourth, another stroke off the lead.
Previous champion Bernd Wiesberger, at No. 37 the most astounding positioned player in the field, shot a 67 yet missed the cut after his 79 from the first day.
A year ago's champ Mikael Lundberg of Sweden shot a 70 to trail pioneer Bourdy by 10 strokes.
Prior, Pavlov's 17 tied for the second-most noticeably awful score on the European Tour.
On the standard 5 to begin with, the 28-year-old Russian discovered the water on six endeavors. The Diamond Country Club course is known for its numerous water perils.
Chris Gane likewise scored a 17 at Gleneagles 12 years back, still three strokes not exactly Philippe Porquier's record of 20 at the French Open in 1978.
In the wake of entering the occasion on welcome, the 1,598th-positioned Pavlov opened with a 71 and looked set to make his first cut on the European Tour before completing at 17 over.
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