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Hungarian world champion and three-time Olympic silver medallist Laszlo Cseh (front) and Zsuzsanna Jakabos swim as they test their new Arena swimming suits in Budapest May 27, 2009. REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh

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    Mickelson upbeat despite poor Singapore Open start

    Thu Nov 13, 2008 4:41am EST

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) - World number three Phil Mickelson was in a positive mood despite shooting a two-over-par 73 in the opening round of the Singapore Open on Thursday, the American buoyed by a late revival after a disastrous start.

    Sports

    Teeing off on a damp morning where play was eventually delayed for two hours due to lightning, the globe-trotting Mickelson mixed four bogeys and a birdie over his opening six holes to slip to three over par.

    Three birdies coming in, offset by back-to-back bogeys from his 15th hole, helped Mickelson climb up the leaderboard to finish his round six shots behind local hope Lam Chih Bing, who fired a sparkling 67 to stake an early lead.

    "I know two-over par does not sound good but I will actually take it," Mickelson told reporters at the $5 million event. "I got off to a terrible start and was three over early. I did very well to recover."

    As one of a number of big international names lured to the Asian Tour's richest national open, Mickelson was pleased to escape with his two-over total, considering he was out on the course when the weather was at its most hostile.

    "The conditions are calm and beautiful now but when we were playing, it was windy and raining... a lot tougher," he added.

    "I'll take my total. I need to get off to a good start tomorrow (Friday) and make some birdies.

    "I don't feel like I am out of the tournament by any means and I could be right back in it with a good round. Anything in the sixties will do."

    Mickelson also praised the par-71 Serapong Course hosting the year's event and felt the tournament organizers had set up a fair yet challenging layout.

    "The greens are just perfect," he added. "They were not soggy or wet (even after the rain). They have a system that sucks all the moisture out... it does and incredible job because the greens were immaculate."

    (Editing by Peter Rutherford)



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