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Young talents from Asia, Europe eye Hero Indian Open success

Young talents from Asia and Europe, including Thai prodigy Phachara Khongwatmai and Australian Todd Sinott, are eyeing success at the USD 1.75 million Hero Indian Open which will tee off at the DLF Golf & Country Club from March 9 to 12.

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Young talents from Asia and Europe, including Thai prodigy Phachara Khongwatmai and Australian Todd Sinott, are eyeing success at the USD 1.75 million Hero Indian Open which will tee off at the DLF Golf & Country Club from March 9 to 12.

18-year-old Phachara and Sinott, 24, who have begun to catch the eye, are looking at making a mark in Hero Indian Open 2017.

The most prodigious young talent in Asia is perhaps Phachara - the youngest ADT winner at 15, four years ago. He was tied-second at the BNI Indonesian Masters and also enjoyed three other top-five finishes in 2016.

This year he was second at Singapore Open and then again second at the ISPS Handa World Super 6 Perth and awaits his first Asian/European Tour win. Sinott, on the other hand, achieved a breakthrough win at the 2017 Leopalace Myanmar Open earlier this year.

Only a month ago, another Thai youngster, Jazz Janewattananond won his first Asian Tour title at the 2017 Bashundhara Bangladesh Open by four shots. Jazz is so named because his father loved jazz music.

Leading the young Turks from Europe will be 22-year-old Matteo Manassero, who at one stage looked like he was going to take the golf world by storm.

Manassero was the second youngest full European Tour member in history after Seve Ballesteros. He was also the youngest winner in European Tour history thanks to his victory in the 2010 Castello Masters, aged just 17 years and 188 days.

Still a teenager he won three European Tour titles.

One ranked as high as No. 25 in the world, some changes in swing and body saw his form dip, but last year he was third at Scottish Open and T-17 at Turkish Airlines Open.

Another great young talent is 19-year-old Renato Paratore, who at 17 years and 341 days became the third youngest player in the history of the Qualifying School to claim a European Tour card in 2014.

Last year he was T-7 at both Omega European Masters and Alfred Dunhill Links. With a brilliant amateur career he won the Men's Individual Strokeplay Gold at the 2014 Youth Olympics in China.

In his rookie season on the European Challenge Tour last year, Portugal's Ricardo Gouveia, 24, toped the Road to Oman Rankings. Gouveia claimed his third career title and second of 2015 at the NBO Golf Classic Grand Final and set a record for earnings. He has already become the highest-ranked Portuguese player of all time earlier in the season.

Just 21, Paul Dunne, made headlines in 2015 when, as an amateur, he shared the lead heading into the final round of The Open Championship at St Andrews. His 204 (-12) 54-hole total was a record low for an amateur. He is coming off his first European Tour top ten finish at last week's Joburg Open.

India too has its own Shubhankar Sharma, 19, S Chikkrangappa, 23 and Khalin Joshi 24, each of whom has come close to their maiden win and would look to do well at the Indian Open.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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