Bryson DeChambeau, Charles Howell III and Scott Vincent opened LIV Golf Korea in style, each firing a 5-under 65 to share the first-round lead, and the opening day set a brisk, competitive tone for the week with plenty of momentum swings and standout shots to talk about.
The course presented a clean challenge from the first tee, and those three players turned that challenge into opportunity by playing aggressive without getting careless. Bryson’s length was obvious when he chose to attack par 5s, while Charles leaned on his steady short game and Scott stayed patient through a few tense finishes. It felt like a classic day where different styles all found a way to the top of the leaderboard.
DeChambeau looked particularly intent on using his power to simplify the holes, and when his irons found the right windows he converted birdie chances that kept him in the hunt. Howell showed why experience matters, setting up scoring with smart position play and several well-timed lag putts. Vincent balanced aggression and caution, striking a steady rhythm that helped him navigate a couple of tricky moments late in the round.
The leaders didn’t run away from the field, which makes the rest of the week interesting because anyone within a handful of strokes can change the story with a hot round. Several other names stayed within striking distance, taking advantage of soft pins and receptive greens while others stumbled on a few crucial holes. Conditions were fair but not forgiving, so mistakes were costly and birdies felt earned throughout the day.
Fans saw a mix of highlight-reel shots and grind-it-out pars, the kind of variety that keeps tournament golf engaging from start to finish. There were a few long putts that rattled in and a couple of tee shots that flirted with trouble but found recoveries, showcasing the field’s depth. Those moments mattered because late holes became pressure tests, and the players who handled them best ended up at the top when the scores were posted.
Caddies played an important role in managing yardages and reading tricky breaks, and the leadership trio clearly leaned on that experience to make the right calls. Course management shone through as a theme for the leaders; when they missed, they minimized damage, and when chances arrived they took full advantage. That balance between getting aggressive and avoiding disaster is often the difference between a headline round and a forgettable one.
Looking ahead, the leaderboard is set up for dramatic swings, with pin positions likely to be more aggressive and players pushing to make moves early on the second day. A low round from someone chasing could reshuffle the mix, while the leaders will need to maintain the kind of focus that got them there in the first place. Momentum can flip quickly in events like this, so expect plenty of strategy talk and bold decisions as the weekend approaches.
The crowd seemed energized, enjoying the competitive buzz and the chance to see big names mix it up at the top. Media chatter will focus on who can sustain scoring and who will peel off under pressure, but the clearest takeaway is that the tournament is wide open despite the three-way tie. Each of those 65s was a statement, and now it is up to the players to back it up over the next rounds.
