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Kelowna's Deck tied for top spot at B.C. amateur golf championship

The opening round of the 114th British Columbia Amateur finished in the pouring rain at Pheasant Glen Golf Club in Qualicum Beach.

It may have dampened Doug Roxburgh's 50th consecutive start in this championship, but it didn't drown the spirits of first round co-leaders William Deck of Kelowna and North Vancouver's Roy Kang who both shot 6-under 66.

<who>Lorne White/KelownaNow </who>Kelowna's William Deck shot 6-under 66 to earn a share of the first-round lead at the B.C. Amateur.Deck, 24, got in most of his round before the rain started.

"We pretty much played 71 1/2 holes without rain and then it started coming down on our second shot into the final green," he said.

Deck, representing the Harvest Golf Club, made seven birdies and recorded just one bogey in his round, which he said could have been even lower.

"I left a couple out there, which is the disheartening thing. I had it going. I was playing really well and was hitting the ball great."

<who>Lorne White/KelownaNow </who>Doug Roxburgh, 64, of Vancouver is playing in his 50th B.C. <br>Amateur tournament.Deck, an Okanagan Mission Secondary School graduate who played his collegiate golf at UBC Okanagan, is competing in his sixth B.C. Amateur. His best finish came last year, when he tied for 11th. "I want to make the Willingdon Cup team," said Deck, who finished in a tie for fifth place (212) at the Kelowna Golf and Country Club’s 54-hole Ogopogo Invitational on the past weekend (won by the KGCC’s Matt Palahniuk (207)). "That is my main goal. I think I’m playing well enough to make that a reality."

The top three B.C. players after Friday's final round will represent the province at the Canadian men's amateur championship, which goes Aug. 8-11 at Royal Ottawa Golf Club.

Kang, a 17-year-old from North Vancouver, birdied four of his first five holes en route to his 66. It was a bounce-back round of sorts for Kang, who was disappointed with his 12th-place finish at last week's B.C. junior boys championship at Arbutus Ridge Golf Club in Cobble Hill.

"Last week I didn't play as well I wanted to," said Kang, who is heading to the University of Denver this fall on a golf scholarship. "But I have played here at Pheasant Glen before so I know the course pretty well. I knew if it hit some good shots there was low score to be had."

Kang made seven birdies in his round, which also finished in the heaviest of the rain. "All the birdies came from five to 10 feet," he said. "I was just hitting it close and making some putts."

It made for a soggy ending to what Roxburgh described as a day when he didn't have his best stuff. He finished with a two-over 74, which left him eight shots behind Deck and Kang.

"I was three-over after three holes and brought it back and finished two-over," Roxburgh said. "So all in all I am fairly pleased with that, especially with the way I hit the ball. I think I hit it a little better coming in. I am out late tomorrow so if the weather cooperates maybe I can get out and hit a few balls and try and find something for tomorrow."

Roxburgh played in a threesome with a pair of Nanaimo-area veterans, Sandy Harper and Stephen Watson. The age of their threesome totalled 162. The fact Roxburgh is making his 50th straight start has him under a spotlight of sorts at Pheasant Glen. But Roxburgh insisted he felt no extra pressure.

"No, I didn't, I was just looking forward to it like all the rest," he said. "It is kind of a nice routine, the Ogopogo (in Kelowna), this one, then the B.C. Seniors the next week, so it is a nice stretch of golf to be able to play. That is what I was looking forward to."

He was also looking forward to seeing Pheasant Glen, a course he had not played until Monday's practice round. He has quickly fallen in love with it. "It is a great golf course," Roxburgh said. "Totally unexpected, totally different than what I had in my mind. I have driven in here a couple of times just to look around, but once you get out and play, there are some quality holes. Harper says it is the most under-rated course on the Island and I tend to agree. It is a really good test of golf."

At age 64, Roxburgh came to Pheasant Glen with no illusions of winning his 14th B.C. Amateur. He just wants to make the cut, something he has done in 47 of his previous 49 starts. He missed the cut by one shot at last year's B.C. Amateur at Fairview Mountain in Oliver.

"For sure, I have no other goal than that," he said. " I think probably another 74 would do it, four-over, but we'll see what happens with the scores and the weather."

Roxburgh's 74, the same score recorded by his two playing partners, left him tied for 68th after the first round. The top 70 and ties after Wednesday's second round will make the cut and play the final two rounds.

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