Sharvin rallies in Mallorca
Francesco Laporta. Picture: Getty Images

Francesco Laporta. Picture: Getty Images

Ardglass’ Cormac Sharvin recovered from a poor start by finishing with two birdies to open with a two-over 73 that left him just four shots behind leader Francesco Laporta in the Challenge Tour Grand Final at Alcanada in Mallorca.

But he had to dig deep late in his round to rescue a score after dropping four shots in an outward nine of 40 blows.

After starting for him with seven pars, he followed a birdie two at the 17th with a birdie three at the last to sign for a 73 that left him tied for 15th and projected to fall from ninth to 12th in the race for 15 European Tour cards.

Sharvin should still safely finish inside the top 15 as it would take a remarkable series of results for him to drop out of the top 15 now. But he will be looking to improve his ranking by Challenging for that elusive maiden win.

He has work to do to catch Laporta who began the Challenge Tour Grand Final occupying the second position on the Road to Mallorca Rankings but is now projected to become Challenge Tour No 1 after taking the first-round lead.

The Italian carded five birdies against only two bogeys to sign for a three under par 68, which was one shot better than his nearest competitors on the difficult Club de Golf Alcanada layout.

The strong start continues an impressive run of form for the 29-year-old, who recently finished as the low-Italian at the European Tour’s Italian Open, a Rolex Series event, before winning the Hainan Open the following week.

Laporta holds a one stroke advantage over home-favourite Sebastian Garcia Rodriguez and Welshman Rhys Enoch, who each carded rounds of two under par 70.

Now that the Challenge Tour Grand Final is under way, the projected Road to Mallorca Rankings come into focus, with the leading 15 players on the season-long points race earning European Tour cards at the end of the week.

While Garcia Rodriguez began the tournament positioned 13th on the Rankings, Enoch teed it up outside of the coveted cut off in 25th, but currently sitting in a two-way tie for second place, he is now projected to climb inside the magic number and finish the year in 13th.

Oliver Farr, who came into the Grand Final holding the 15th and final European Tour card, overcame a triple bogey and a double bogey to finish his round in a tie for 11th place on one over par, which is currently enough for the Welshman to hold onto the final graduation spot.

Francesco Laporta: “It was a tough round today. The wind came up this morning, then went down and then it came up again during the last couple of holes. I played solid and only missed a couple of putts on the first two holes, but after that the putter worked better.

“I’m pretty happy about my round and we’ll just have to see what happens in the next few days.

“The Number One spot is in my mind, for sure. I came here to fight for the first spot and I will fight all week for that. It’s a good start and hopefully I have another one tomorrow.”

Sebastian Garcia Rodriguez: “The golf course is amazing. The greens are very difficult. The key for me today was the second shot. My strategy on the tee box was to hit a lot of drivers, which set me up nicely. In general I’m so happy. It’s my first time playing in the Challenge Tour Grand Final and this start has made me so happy.

“I don’t feel any additional pressure. It’s the next tournament. It’s the same - the same balls, the same clubs, the same tees. The conditions are probably the best we’ve had the entire year in terms of difficulty. It’s so hard and it feels similar to the European Tour.

“My game plan has been the same for the entire year. At the start of this year I told myself I would just take it shot by shot. I played 10 tournaments on the Alps Tour at the start of the year after losing my Challenge Tour status two years ago, and this wasn’t even in my mind in January of this year so for me I’m just so happy to be here.”

Rhys Enoch: “It was very tricky. I don’t think we realised how tricky it was going to be. I think the wind was quite calm earlier and I thought the scoring was going to be low.

“It’s just easy to drop shots, really, really easy. I did that really well today – keeping the bogeys off the card – with only one drop, so it was just about patience and missing in the right spots, especially with how sloped the greens are.

“The wind on the front nine was all over the place. I’m really pleased.

“There are plenty of different outcomes, but I’m focused on winning really. Second would probably be enough if I’m on my own, but then I’m relying on a lot of other people. I’ve just got to try and win because that takes care of it, so that’s my aim.”

Oliver Farr: “There were two bad holes but 16 pretty good ones and looking at the scoring today, to only have two holes where I dropped shots today is pretty good. Obviously I dropped a lot of shots on those holes. It was a challenging day on the greens, but I felt like I handled them pretty well, and hopefully we can make amend for these errors tomorrow.

“Playing the practice round it was one of the first weeks where I haven’t been able to feel what a good score was. Sometimes you can sense what a good score is. People were asking me and I didn’t know. I thought the set-up was fair. There were some tough pins and that’s probably why the scoring is down, but I’m only a few shots behind and it’s early days yet so hopefully I can push up."

Challenge Tour Grand Final, Club de Golf Alcanada, Port d'Alcúdia, Mallorca (Par 71)

Detailed scores

68 F Laporta (Ita),

69 S Garcia Rodriguez (Esp), R Enoch (Wal),

70 D Whitnell (Eng), M Jordan (Eng), M Simonsen (Den), J Senior (Eng),

71 R Sciot-Siegrist (Fra), S Heisele (Ger), E Ferguson (Sco),

72 A Meronk (Pol), J Sjöholm (Swe), O Farr (Wal), W Besseling (Ned),

73 D Huizing (Ned), O Lengden (Swe), C Syme (Sco), C Hill (Sco), M Schneider (Ger), M Baldwin (Eng), Cormac Sharvin (Nir), B Poke (Den),

74 B Easton (RSA), N Von Dellingshausen (Ger), M Fenasse (Fra), A Rozner (Fra), J Geary (Nzl), R Bland (Eng), R Højgaard (Den), B Stow (Eng), L Van Meijel (Ned), D Van Driel (Ned),

75 C Pigem (Esp), R McGowan (Eng), D Perrier (Fra), J Lima (Por), R Santos (Por), G Havret (Fra), S Tiley (Eng)

76 R Roussel (Fra), U Coussaud (Fra),

77 E Cuartero Blanco (Esp), L Scalise (Ita),

78 E Johansen (Nor),

80 L Canter (Eng).