Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Latin American men's amateur championship in Chile


MEXICO’S ORTIZ IN POLE POSITION  with 18 HOLES TO PLAY 


Alvaro Ortiz, of Mexico, takes a one-shot lead into the final round of the 2018 Latin America Amateur Championship at Prince of Wales Country Club, Santiago, Chile.
With a place in the Masters Tournament at stake, Ortiz moved to four-under-par for the championship and leads by one over a group of four contenders, including defending champion Toto Gana and his fellow Chilean and world No. 1-ranked amateur Joaquin Niemann. Also at three-under-par are Argentina’s Jaime Lopez Rivarola, the 36-hole leader, and Daniel Gurtner, of Guatemala.
In a tightly packed leader board, five players sit a stroke further back – Manuel Torres (Venezuela), Gabriel Morgan Birke (Chile), Aaron Terrazas and Mario Carmona (both from Mexico) and Camilo Aguado (Colombia).
Ortiz enjoyed a great start to his third round with birdies at the third and fourth holes but slipped back with bogeys at the sixth and seventh. The 22-year-old, who lost out to Gana in the play-off at last year’s LAAC, bounced back with birdies at the 11th and 14th holes. Another shot slipped away at the 17th before an impressive par save on 18, which resulted in a one-under-par round of 70.
Rivarola struggled to reproduce the same form as yesterday. A costly double-bogey six at the 17th left him two-over for the day.
 In a tougher day for scoring, Gana also had an untidy finish with two dropped shots in his last three holes on his way to a one-over-par 72. Niemann, who also featured in the play-off in Panama last year, matched his compatriot’s round after a bogey at the par-four 18th.
Gurtner, a red-shirt junior at Texas Christian University, started his round at one-under-par, four strokes off the leader, and he made a move with three birdies on the front nine. He sandwiched a birdie at the 16th with dropped shots at the 15th and the 18th to finish with a 69 on three under par
Quotable:
Alvaro Ortiz, 22, Mexico: “Literally, I’ve been thinking about [winning] all year long.  Yes, I am a very emotional player, but tomorrow I want to go out calm and with a lot of patience.  I don’t want the emotions to get the better of me. What I’ve learned this past year, especially in the tournaments I’ve played for my university, is that I have become more mature and that I have learned how to control myself on the inside on the golf course.
Jaime Lopez Rivarola, 22, Argentina: “All I’m really trying to do is beat the golf course.  At the end of the day, whoever beats the golf course by the most shots, wins.  I’m not looking to go win this right out of the gate, but I’m just trying to beat the golf course hole‑by‑hole, and I know if I do that in a good manner, I can really have a chance.  I’m not going to go at every pin out there tomorrow because that’s not the way to play this golf course. There’s all sorts of ways to play it, and what I’m going to do is just keep on with my strategy that I’ve been using these three days and try to be a little bit more precise.”
Toto Gana, 20, Chile: “It was a very difficult day, and I didn’t start the day the way I wanted because I hit a very bad tee shot on the first hole. That kind of diminished the confidence that I had for the day. But from the ninth hole, I was able to hit the ball really well, and the rest of the round. There were a lot of people following us, which surprising because it’s a working day.  Tomorrow I hope we have more people coming and supporting us.  It’s good for me and I believe Joaquin must feel the same way.”
Joaquin Niemann, 19, Chile: “I feel a lot of motivation at the moment, especially because I am the only player in the field that shot seven‑under (during the second round), and I am actually just one shot off the lead.  So I believe that tomorrow I can shoot another very low round. The golf course had some tricky hole positions, but in the end, I believe that I could have shot a low score.  The truth is that I missed a lot of fairways, I was out of position, and by the time that I was able to hit the greens, I didn’t make the putts.”
Daniel Gurter, 22, Guatamala: “This is some new territory for me.  I’ve never been in this position in any tournament of this caliber.  I’ve had some good tournaments in the States, but never been more excited. I feel like everyone’s going to be nervous [tomorrow].  I’m not the only one who is going to feel those nerves.  I’ve got no expectations. I’ve just got to play my own game and have a lot of fun.”
TO VIEW ALL  THE THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
CLICK HERE

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