First round of AJGA Thunderbird International
May 27, 2006 | 12:57 PM
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Rory shot 7 under par (65) today at the first round of the AJGA Thunderbird International, recording a total of 10 birdies, taking into account the 2-stroke penalty that he faced (see below for details). Without the penalty, Rory would have had 11 birdies and broken the course record by shooting a 63 (the course record of Grayhawk GC being 64).

( click here for an image )

Previous updates throughout the round:

Rory is currently leading the AJGA Thunderbird International by two strokes, shooting 6 under par through the 14th hole.

Snapshot taken from AJGA’s LIVE Scoring

[Edit] On the 15th hole (Hole #6), Rory was penalized two strokes under Rule 15-3b for mistakenly hitting another player’s ball (the other player also hit Rory’s ball by mistake). However he strived for the hole and chipped-in for a birdie (which, with the two strokes penalty, becomes a bogey) and still retains his position with a one stroke lead (5-under).

[Edit] Rory makes a comeback with a birdie in the 16th hole (Hole #7) and another birdie in the 17th hole (Hole #8). Falling short of another birdie in the 18th hole (Hole #9) by mere inches, he finished the round with a 7-under par 65.

Snapshot

Taken from AJGA.org:

HIE EN FUEGO IN THE DESERT AT THUNDERBIRD INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Rory Hie of Lakewood, Calif., was as hot as the desert sun during the first round of the Thunderbird International Junior on Saturday, firing a 7-under-par 65 to take a three-shot lead in the Boys Division.

Hie, who began on No. 10, got off to a good start with back-to-back 20-foot birdie putts on Nos. 11 and 12. His bad break came on No. 6 when he hit the wrong ball, incurred a two-stroke penalty, and ended up with a bogey.

“I had a pretty good round today,” the 17-year Rolex Junior All-American said. “I committed to every shot and got lucky with a couple of shots.”

Hie had a career-best 10 birdies with three bogeys and nines of 34-31.

“Ten birdies is a dream come true for me,” Hie said. “I saw the ball going in every hole and it did. I noticed a lot of players under par on the leaderboards, so I just tried not to give up shots to the field.”

A quote from Golfweek:

“… It may have even got a bit more confusing Saturday when Rory Hie, Golfweek’s No. 1 junior at one point last summer, and Kevin Tway hit each other’s balls from the sixth fairway and were both penalized two strokes. (Amazingly, Hie - who blamed the mistake on being “brain dead” - still shot 65 to take the first-round lead by three shots, while Tway, the reigning U.S. Junior champion, shot 76.)”