Zhou Xunshu: A pro golfer on the China Tour Rotating Header Image

Xiamen, Day 1: Late bogeys drop Zhou from top 3

Zhou Xun Shu rebounded nicely from the worst performance of his professional golf career, but his one-under 69 on Thursday was another round that left him pondering, “What if?” Last week in Guangzhou, Zhou finished almost dead last in the Midea Classic, an Asian Tour event with lots of foreign pros and a big US$400,000 purse. But a freak accident — Zhou slipped and fell while crossing a road median — left his left thumb bloody and raw, and the pain made driving the ball problematic. Zhou’s early exit in Guangzhou allowed his thumb to heal, and gave him time to focus on the Xiamen Leg of the China Tour, the second to last event of the 2007 season. He arrived in Xiamen on Saturday.

The extra time appeared to pay dividends during the opening round at Orient Golf & Country Club. As Zhou walked the 18th fairway, the big leaderboard in the distance showed him in first place at 3-under. But the scoredboard had yet to record the bogey Zhou registered on No. 17 after teeing off into a clutch of small palm trees. And the scoreboard also had yet to recognize the bogey Zhou was about to score on 18. He left his 55-foot birdie putt short — about 7 feet short — and his par putt stopped one inch from the cup. And thus 3-under quickly became 1-under and the scorekeepers scrambled to remove Zhou’s name from the big board.

Still, Zhou’s 69 put him in a seven-way tie for seventh place, four strokes behind the leader, Wu Kangchun, who shot a 65 despite a double bogey on No. 7.

View the entire leaderboard here.

Kunming, Day 4: Another top 10 finish

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Zhou Xun Shu rebounded from his rough Friday outing to go under par for the weekend, posting rounds of 71 and 70 on Saturday and Sunday to finish in a five-way tie for ninth in the Kunming Leg of the Omega China Tour at Lakeview Golf Club in Yunnan Province. Zhou’s second top-ten finish of 2007 (he placed eighth in Guangzhou) earned him RMB 12,860 before tax and moved him up to 13th on the 2007 Omega China Tour Order of Merit with RMB 64,035 in prize money. View the final leaderboard here.

The only major blemish on Zhou’s final round card was a double bogey on 10, a 449 yard par 4 that Zhou had parred the previous three rounds. After a tee shot that landed in the hilly rough to the left of the fairway, he barely missed an 18-foot par putt and then again just missed on a 3-footer for bogey. Birdies on 12 and 16 pulled Zhou back to 4-under for the tournament, which is how he finished, 11 strokes behind winner Zheng Wengen.

Next up for Zhou is the Midea China Classic, an Asian Tour event at the Royal Orchid International Golf Club in Beijiao Town, Shunde City, Guangdong Province, September 13-16.