An opening 6-under 66 on this Atlantic gem, which is deceptively penal for being so beautiful, was admittedly flawless – or nearly so. Still, it gave Ortiz the early lead.
“I literally made one mistake in the whole round and it was in the beginning,” he said of a round where he balanced out two bogeys with six birdies and an eagle. “Just drove it great. I don't think I missed a fairway today, and I was hitting it close, putting good.”
Maybe it’s karma, and if so, it’s well-deserved on many levels.
“I think everything happens for a reason, and I think it was better for me not to be here Tuesday,” Ortiz said. “I didn't get much attention, and kind of like Wednesday, I just played my practice round and came to the media center and got up here.”
Ortiz is a universal favorite this week, and that much was clear as he walked off the ninth green (his last) under a light rainfall. He is greeted as a champion even if he technically is not.
For one thing, he’s familiar. Ortiz is one of 19 players in the 108-man field who has teed it up in every LAAC since the tournament was born in 2015. He brings the best record to Casa de Campo, having finished T-3, DQ, T-2 and second. His No. 96 position in the World Amateur Golf Ranking is the fifth best in the field.
It was a good morning for Mexico, considering that just a few hours before Ortiz turned in his round, the country’s Mayakoba Resort had been announced as the host for the 2020 LAAC. It’s good news for his compatriots, if not for Ortiz.
“For me, it's kind of a shame, because I won't be able to play,” he said. “But for Mexicans, we've been waiting for this tournament to be held in our home country.”
Last year’s champion, Chilean Joaquin Niemann, was vocal about having stayed amateur just to give the LAAC one more shot. He entered as the favorite and he won, which isn’t always the case at this event.
Ortiz’s motivations for playing this week despite finishing school at Arkansas last spring were similar. First there was the Palmer Cup, a summer team event for college players that included an international component for the first time this year. Even though that was six months ago, the Masters invitation for this week’s winner provides a little incentive.
In the meantime, Ortiz has spent time grooving swing changes that would specifically help him play more accurately off the tee. Judging by Wednesday’s round, they’ve taken hold.
Teeth of the Dog, as Ortiz knows from 2016 (despite the unfortunate DQ), is a course that demands precision. Hit it in the fairway and you can score. That becomes more difficult, of course, when the wind comes up.
“I like this course,” he said. “It’s a good design for me. I think it’s a good setup, and it just suits my eye from the tee and I think that is the key this week.”



