"Our coach, Reiner Saxton, is here with us and he knows how to win this tournament. He’s a great man to lean on.
"I have my win in the Boys' Amateur Championship too. I definitely know what it takes to win in match play."
On a warm and bright day, with enough of a breeze to cause plenty of mischief, the No 1 seed, Wilhelm Ryding of Sweden, had a scare against Loran Appel of the Netherlands but pounced on his rival’s late wobble and won on the final green.
Appel had been two-up after the turn and was still one hole to the good with three to play but the 20-year-old’s game would unravel as the tension mounted.
He plunged his ball out of bounds on the 16th to allow Ryding to restore parity and when his putt up the slope on the 17th rolled back to his feet, Appel found himself one behind.
The momentum shift was considerable. As Ryding blasted his drive down the 18th, left-hander Appel hooked his own tee-shot into the rough and his hopes all but vanished.
It was a battle the whole way", Ryding said. "Loran was up the whole way but in that stretch (near the end) I just tried to keep it in play. I did, and then made some good pars coming in.
"I was 2-down heading into 14 but won that hole. Come the 16th I was still hitting first and just to see the ball in the fairway there was great.
"You try to get it down there so you can reach it in two. Unfortunately, he went out of bounds. It could happen to anyone. It’s a tough, tough hole.
"Conditions were definitely trickier. You've had some longer clubs in today into the wind. That was a little bit different from yesterday and the day before, but it's been fun. It's been fun and challenging."