Race to Dubai leader Henrik Stenson carded a four-under-par 68 for a share of
fourth place after the opening round of the World Tour Championship.
The Swede, 37, will become the first to claim the PGA
Tour's FedEx Cup and the European Tour equivalent in the same year if he wins in
Dubai this weekend.
Two men could usurp him by taking the final event - Justin Rose, who fired a
70, and Graeme McDowell, who shot a 72.
Spaniard Alejandro Canizares has a one-shot lead after seven birdies in a 66.
A total of nine players can still win the European Tour prize through various
permutations.
In addition to the three for whom victory would guarantee the Race to Dubai
trophy, Ian Poulter, Jamie Donaldson, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Thongchai
Jaidee, Richard Sterne and last week's Turkish Open winner Victor
Dubuisson also have opportunities.
Only two of those in contention were outside the top 10 after the first
round, Northern Ireland's McDowell recovering from two dropped shots in his
opening three holes to post three consecutive birdies on the back nine to lie
joint 27th, and Fernandez-Castano mixing four birdies and three birdies in a 71
for a share of 17th.
Stenson captured the PGA
Tour's £6.3m FedEx Cup bonus when he won the final American event,
September's Tour Championship in Atlanta.
He was hampered by a wrist injury coming into the
European Tour finale but collected three birdies on the front nine and two more
coming home before three-putting the final green for his sole bogey.
"It has been a lot of hard work all season and I just let my focus slip on
the last," Stenson admitted.
"That sucks, but I am still in good shape and playing nicely. The guys are
running on fumes so everybody is looking forward to getting done.
"You can't win a tournament on Thursday but you can certainly play your way
out of it. I would have taken four under at the start of the day so I just have
to let the disappointment of the last slip away."
If Ryder Cup favourite Poulter triumphs at Jumeirah Golf Estates' Greg
Norman-designed Earth course, Stenson will have to finish second to deny the
Englishman top spot in the overall standings.
Poulter, fourth in the standings, carded four birdies and one bogey in his
opening 69, but was frustrated at missing a number of chances to be higher than
joint-seventh on the leaderboard.
"I made two putts which were outside birdie chances and
took a couple more but the rest were missed. I am frustrated but happy to be
only three behind," he said.
"I need to continue to be aggressive and see if I can nick it at the end.
It's a good mix to be really angry being three under par and still being in
there for the next three days."
Canizares, the 30-year-old son of former European Ryder Cup player Jose
Maria, won on only his third European Tour start at the 2006 Russian Open.
Seven years and almost 200 events have since passed without him being able to
add a second title.
Rory McIlroy, who birdied the final five holes to claim this event 12 months
ago but is yet to win a tournament in 2013, birdied three of the opening
four holes but fell away to finish in 71.
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