Mc Ginley tied at third in Germany

Golf: England’s Chris Wood staged his own version of ‘The Great Escape’ before starting the BMW International Open with a seven…

Golf:England's Chris Wood staged his own version of 'The Great Escape' before starting the BMW International Open with a seven-under-par 65 in Cologne today.Among a number of golfers stuck in traffic and worried they might miss their tee-off times, the 24-year-old from Bristol led a breakaway movement through the fields.

“We finally decided to leg it when we had gone one kilometre in 20 minutes — it was that bad,” Wood said. “It was about 3.5 kilometres and I was a bit sweaty when I got here, but it was worth it.”

The former England international, still seeking his maiden victory on the European Tour after three runner-up finishes, grabbed no fewer than nine birdies on the Gut Larchenhof course.

There were also two bogeys on his card, however, and with a seven-under-par 65 he finished the day one behind Australian Marcus Fraser and Paraguay’s Fabrizio Zanotti.

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“It was the best I’ve putted all year,” added Wood, perhaps best known for his fifth place in the 2008 Open when still an amateur and then his tie for third the following year at Turnberry. Scoring was low following some heavy rain, but that did not help Paul Casey on his latest return from injury.

Ten years on from scoring a career-low 62 on the same lay-out, Casey — who missed last week’s US Open to give his shoulder more rest — managed only a 76 to be down near the rear of the 156-strong field.

Fraser birdied five of his last six holes to set the early target, while Zanotti’s round was even more action-packed — two eagles, seven birdies, a bogey and a double bogey.

Wood shares third spot with fellow Englishman Danny Willett and 45-year-old Irishman Paul McGinley, who continued exactly where he left off in Wales three weeks ago.

The 2002 Ryder Cup hero eagled the 577-yard 16th from 30 feet and then almost holed his approach to the difficult 456-yard last.

“It turned a good day into a great day,” McGinley said. “In all my life I don’t think I’ve been on that 16th in two before — that’s new technology for you.”

Colin Montgomerie, back from television commentary work in San Francisco, shot 69, but local favourite Martin Kaymer struggled with jet-lag — “I only slept for two hours,” he said — and had to settle for a 71, the same as Sergio Garcia.