Eddie Pepperell ace gives him share of the lead at British Masters

A spectacular hole-in-one helped Eddie Pepperell claim a share of the lead with Ryder Cup star Tommy Fleetwood and Matt Wallace after the opening round of the £3 million British Masters.
Eddie Pepperell during day one at Walton Heath. Picture: John Walton/PA WireEddie Pepperell during day one at Walton Heath. Picture: John Walton/PA Wire
Eddie Pepperell during day one at Walton Heath. Picture: John Walton/PA Wire

While tournament host Justin Rose struggled to an opening 74 at Walton Heath, his 
fellow Englishmen overcame difficult windy conditions to end the day on top of the leaderboard on five under par.

The first hole-in-one of Pepperell’s European Tour career came in remarkable fashion, his five-iron from 172 yards on the ninth seeming to hit the base of the flag, bounce high and away from the hole before spinning back into the cup.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Pepperell’s birdie on the 10th and eagle on the 11th meant he covered a three-hole stretch in five under par before bogeys on the 13th and 15th were followed by a closing birdie.

“It was a bizarre shot from where I was standing,” Pepperell said. “It looked like it pitched in the hole, jumped up and looked like it was going long because of the height it came out and obviously went in. I played awful in the pro-am on Wednesday, and I wouldn’t say I played great today but had that really hot run and it’s great to be at the top with Matt and Tommy.”

Fleetwood’s own round was not without incident, his only bogey coming after an errant tee shot on the 17th finished in a cup holder in a buggy parked to the left of the green.

“I’m still not sure how it got there,” said Fleetwood, who outscored playing partner, Ryder Cup team-mate and Race to Dubai rival Francesco Molinari, by six shots.

Wallace had set the clubhouse target earlier in the day as he seeks a fifth win in his 50th European Tour start and fourth victory of a season which saw him narrowly miss out on a Ryder Cup wild card.

“I was disappointed to not be there but I saw Thomas [Bjorn, European captain] on Tuesday this week and he said probably one of the nicest things someone has ever said to me as a golfer,” said Wallace.

“I won’t say what that is because it’s between me and him, but I’m going to use that and I’m the type of character that’s going to use this disappointment as fire to go and make the next one and play better and get better as a golfer and a human being.”

Wallace headed straight to the driving range after Europe’s victory at Le Golf National was confirmed and his social media post saying “2020 starts now” did not go unnoticed by Bjorn.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“That shows a lot about his character and the way he’s been through it all has been great,” Bjorn said after a 73. “I just said to him I’ll always be there for him, but I was there for him before. I had a vision of what this team should be and unfortunately at that moment in time Matt wasn’t in it, but he was very, very close.”

David Drysdale was the leading Scot on three under after 17 holes when play was ended early due to bad light.

Related topics: