Shane Lowry inches away from an ace as he makes solid start at Honda Classic

Leona Maguire is three shots off the lead after second round in Thailand

Shane Lowry of Ireland lines up a putt on the 11th hole at the Honda Classic. Photograph: Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty
Shane Lowry of Ireland lines up a putt on the 11th hole at the Honda Classic. Photograph: Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty

What’s that about patience being a virtue? Shane Lowry allowed himself a wry grin as he walked in a 12-foot putt on the sixth green – his 15th hole of the round – for a birdie, as finally his putter, an alien object for much of the round, obeyed his command and that piece of magic was followed by another from 22 feet on the next hole as a late rally enabled the world number 20 to open the Honda Classic at Palm Beach Gardens in Florida with a strong two-under-par 68.

In a round where Lowry was majestic off the tee and found 17 of 18 greens in regulation, putting had proven to be the one weak area in his game (he totalled 31 putts in all) until that late salvo moved him up the leaderboard to lie three shots off the pace of first round leaders Joseph Bramlett and Billy Horschel.

Certainly Lowry’s patience on the greens was ultimately rewarded as the Offaly golfer stuck to his task. “I played nice. I didn’t hole as many putts as I would have like. I felt I could have shot a couple better but I’m happy overall,” he said.

Lowry, who started on the 10th with a bogey, birdied the 13th and 17th holes (where he hit a 9-iron tee-shot inside a foot of the hole) to turn in one-under only to bogey the second after finding a fairway bunker and hitting his approach short of the green (the only one he missed in regulation all day) and failing to get up and down to save his par.

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However, that late birdie salvo moved Lowry in the right direction.

Of his struggles on the greens, Lowry said: “There’s a lot more grass on them than I remember here. They’re very grainy. I know in our group we all struggled with the pace of the greens. It was hard when you’re 20 feet and you don’t want to leave yourself too many three, four, five-footers with a lot of grain around the hole. So you’re just trying to drop them in from 20 feet. It was quite hard to judge the pace.”

Another pleasing aspect for Lowry was the developing relationship with new caddie Darren Reynolds. The pair’s first week together resulted in a missed cut in the Phoenix Open but Lowry claimed a tied-14th finish in the Genesis Invitational and there was further good vibes in the start to the Honda.

“Darren and I are getting on well. I like the way we’re working. Obviously our first week wasn’t the best start, but things have been going well the last couple of weeks and long may it continue,” said Lowry who is playing for a fifth week in six and will extend his hectic itinerary at next week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational and the following week’s The Players.

Fellow Irishman Padraig Harrington finished his first round two-over par and in a tie for 83rd. The two-time Honda Classic champion bogeyed the sixth and 10th holes before his first birdie of the day on the 13th, followed by a third bogey on the par three 17th.

Leona Maguire is three shots off the lead after the second round of the €1.6m Honda LPGA Thailand at Siam Country Club on Friday. The 28 year-old completed back to back bogey-free rounds, following up on her first round 68 with a four under par 67.

Thailand’s Natthakritta Vongtaveelap is one stroke clear of Sweden’s Maja Stark at the top of the leaderboard on 12 under par. Maguire is one of seven players in a tie for eighth, with her four birdies arriving on the first, fourth, seventh and 15th holes.

Philip Reid

Philip Reid

Philip Reid is Golf Correspondent of The Irish Times