Victorian young guns Lucas Herbert and amateur Brett Coletta
lead the Isuzu Queensland Open after the morning field of the second round.
Victorian young guns Lucas Herbert and amateur Brett Coletta
lead the Isuzu Queensland Open after the morning field of the second round.
At 4-under the card Herbert and Coletta are leading the ISPS
HANDA PGA Tour of Australasia tournament with the afternoon field now on
course.
A creative player on course, Herbert fired 2-under 68 which
featured an eagle, two birdies and two bogeys.
"I’m not the longest guy out here, but probably longer than
average, so I like to take driver off the tee as much as I can. It’s probably a
strength of mine," said Herbert.
"I just try to find little spots that maybe the rest of the field won’t
play as well as me. I think a lot of the time that comes off as aggressive.
"Maybe 80 per cent of the time I pull it off, then other 20
per cent of the time if looks quite stupid.
"It’s always good fun though and I like to think I am at
least an entertaining person to watch," added Herbert, whose typical style of
play was on display with a brilliant par save on the 18th.
"I hit a driver trying to get the ball up onto the left side
of the fairway. I blocked it into the tree and I had to try and work it right
to left which is pretty hard from 60m out.
"Unfortunately it caught a tree branch which knocked me back
onto the 1st fairway. I think I was 20-30m longer for my third shot.
"I didn’t have a yardage but I threw it up onto the green to
about 15 feet and knocked it in. It was one of those putts that kept the round
going."
In his second year as a Professional, Herbert’s passion for
the game is strong with the hard work he has been putting in, paying dividends.
"I had a bad patch last year and even at the start of this
year. Mentally there were a lot of things that had to happen for me to turn it
around. I missed a cut at the New Zealand Open which was the turning point,"
added Herbert.
"For 18 months when I went to practice it felt like work, it
wasn’t enjoyable anymore but I have found that passion for the game.
"Setting some goals has helped, and knowing if I practice
hard I can get there. Before that I didn’t have any solid goals to work
towards, I was just trying to get better every day which is good in theory but
it didn’t quite work."
"It would be great to win, but at this point, I am still
learning a lot playing around these Queensland golf courses so I just want to
learn a lot from this week."
Also learning a lot recently is amateur Brett Coletta has
come into the Isuzu Queensland Open from a near miss at the Asia-Pacific
Amateur Championship.
The 20-year-old finished runner-up to Curtis Luck, missing a
place at the 2017 Masters Tournament by one shot.
"Last week was a bit of a disappointment, but I have come
here to put my best foot forward so to be leading is very good. I am happy,"
said Coletta.
"The Asia-Pacific Amateur was such a good opportunity; it’s
something that money can’t buy. To have those feelings you get when you are
playing under that heat is nothing you will ever experience unless you are in
the moment.
"If I look at it that way, it’s a positive and a good
experience but it still burns and stings."
The learning experience is already paying off with Coletta
in contention at his seventh Professional tournament.
"I am putting my name up there again and hopefully tomorrow
I am in the lead group, it’s another good experience," added Coletta.
"The experience is second to none playing in Pro events. You
get out here and you’re playing against the best in the country.
"To be here, where I am, and tied for the lead is so
reassuring to me; to know that I can come out here and compete against the
Pros."