Bjorn's tips help point Dougherty in the right direction

Nick Dougherty did his battered confidence the world of good with an opening seven-under-par 66 at the Hassan Trophy in Morocco yesterday.

Home in 30 with an eagle and five birdies, the 27-year-old, from Liverpool, took a one-stroke lead over Ireland's Peter Lawrie, Scot Stephen Gallacher, Italian Francesco Molinari, India's SSP Chowrasia and South Americans Ricardo Gonzalez and Fabrizio Zanotti.

What Dougherty took most satisfaction from was the fact that his round came on the tougher Red course at Royal Dar Es Salam. Of the six players just behind him all but Chowrasia were on the much shorter Blue.

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From a high of 46th in the world just over two years ago, the three-time European Tour winner has dropped to 120th and missed out on the first two world championships this season.

"I've been struggling so much I'm just trying to build some confidence and hit as many good shots as I can," he said.

"Thomas Bjorn gave me quite a bit of help (on Wednesday) on the range, which meant the world to me obviously, but it's a work in progress.

"Anything under par I would have been happy with, so I was delighted with that. I think seven under is a really, really good score round there.

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"I putted fabulous and I'm delighted with my short game in general, but it's the long game that's concerning me. I've been battling with that for a long time now."

Breaking his driver on the eve of the event did not hold Lawrie back.

"The head of the driver came loose during practice. I have a spare, but I'm just not not 100 per cent confident with it," said the former Rookie of the Year, whose only European Tour win came in the 2008 Spanish Open.

"The three-wood's going well, but the Red is long and the driver will have to come out."

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Hull's Richard Finch carded an opening round of 71 on the Blue course, while Rotheram's Danny Willett hit 73 on the Red, where Harrogate's John Parry was one shot behind him.

The 104-strong field switch courses today as the pro-am format continues before the top 65 professionals go through to the closing 36 holes on the Red.

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