Thomas Bjorn fired a five-under-par 66 to take the clubhouse lead at the Barclays Singapore Open before the heavens opened.
                                
Bjorn: Seized the early initiative 								     
 
Heavy thunderstorms forced the opening round to be suspended with about half the field yet to complete their first rounds. 
The Dane leads by one over England's Simon Khan, Spaniard Pablo  Martin and Thailand's Chinnarat Phadungsil, all of whom managed to post  67s before play was called off. 
Paul Casey lies in joint fifth place after a three-under 68  alongside Korean Y.E. Yang and Kwanchai Tannin of Thailand. Fellow Thai  Chapchai Nirat had also raced to three under par after completing just  five holes. 
While Bjorn has won 13 times in Europe, the 41-year-old Dane is  still searching for his first win in Asia. His opening round performance  at the Sentosa Golf Club has now kept up his hopes of meeting that  target.  
"I came here and saw the golf course, and knew that everything  was about driving the golf ball well. It's not the longest golf course  in the world so if you can keep it in the fairway, you can produce a  score, and I did that very well today. That's only round one, so we'll  work from here," said Bjorn, who marked his card with six birdies  against one bogey. 
"I always enjoy coming to Singapore and Malaysia. You have got to  pace yourself a little bit and not use too much energy through the  week. It is about playing golf this week, and quite nice for the body to  be feeling warm and nice out there. No cold for the old joints to get  you into trouble!" he added. 
Chinnarat, who became the youngest winner on the Asian Tour when  he won his first title on home soil at the age of 17 years and five  days, believes he can do well this week, despite the kind of competition  that includes World No 1 Rory McIlroy. 
"I feel very good. I feel very confident today on my front-nine. I  hit a lot of good tee shots on the front nine. I putted well too," said  the 24-year-old. 
"On this course, you've to hit the ball onto the fairways and that's what I managed to do throughout my round today." 
Four-time Major winner Phil Mickelson of the United States had a  round to forget after he signed for a 73 while three-time Barclays  Singapore Open winner, Adam Scott of Australia returned with a 71. 
"It was not the start I was hoping for. I had been playing really  well heading into this tournament. I hit some poor shots but fought  very hard to stay a couple over," said Mickelson. 
McIlroy was even par through eight holes before play was suspended.
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