Chileans Lukas Roessler and Gabriel Morgan Birke are tied for second place, two strokes back at 1 under.

Ramirez, a 22-year-old Colombian, bogeyed two of his first three holes but then caught fire in the middle of his round. Five birdies in a seven-hole stretch rocketed him to the top of the leader board and he parred his final seven holes to claim the 18-hole lead on a day so blustery that only three players in the field broke par.

The spark for Ramirez’s round came on the par-5 fifth hole. After hitting his second shot just over the green, Ramirez chipped back and made a tricky 12-footer for his first birdie of the day.

“With that putt, I felt like something good was coming,” Ramirez said. “The putter kept me in the round.”

Ramirez, who has played in all five previous editions of the LAAC, credited his comfort at El Camaleón in part to a series of practice rounds that he and his Colombian teammates played earlier this month at TPC Cartagena – a course with similar grass and wind. He also said that playing his college golf at Texas Tech University was a benefit, as he learned to deal with Texas’s ever-present breezes.

“I feel like I have all the shots in my bag,” he said.

Unlike Ramirez, who was among the final players on the course, Birke and Roessler teed off in the morning. Roessler, at just 15 years of age, is one of the youngest players in the field but is quite familiar with the LAAC all the same as his older brother, Toto Gana, was the 2017 champion at Club de Golf de Panama.

Roessler was steady for most the round, birdieing two holes on the front nine and then chipping in for birdie on number 11 before stumbling just a bit on his way in with bogeys on 12 and 14. Birke’s experience was similar, as he started on the 10th and played his first 14 holes in 3 under only to bogey 6 and 7.

Birke said he was not surprised that many players struggled to figure out the winds that whipped through the course because the directions were often the opposite of what they were during the players’ practice rounds.

“What surprises me most is that the tournament here, when it’s played on the PGA Tour, they win with scores of 22 under par,” Birke said. “I have no idea how they could accomplish that.”

Mexico’s Aaron Terrazas led the charge for the host country, finishing in a tie for fourth following a 1-over-par 72.