SUN CITY, South Africa — Bill Haas of the United States bogeyed two of his last three holes to end the first round of the Nedbank Challenge tied for the lead with Belgian Nicholas Colsaerts. The pair finished with a two-under-par total of 70 at the 7162-meter Gary Player Country Club course in the northwest tourism resort of Sun City. English defending champion Lee Westwood, South African hope Louis Oosthuizen and Paul Lawrie from Scotland were trailing by one shot. Haas's father, veteran player Jay Haas, takes part in the seniors event of the tournament, but grabbed a moment to watch his son birdie the par-three seventh. Haas junior was leading by two strokes when he bogeyed the par-three 16th and par-four the 18th. “I got a little ahead of myself and made a couple of bogeys coming in,” he said afterwards, disappointed with his finish. This allowed Colsaerts, who at No. 36 is placed just above Haas on the Official World Golf Rankings, to end the opening day tied for the lead with the American. Sweden's Peter Hanson and Carl Pettersson, Martin Kaymer from Germany, Italy's Francesco Molinari, and South African Charl Schwartzel all finished the day on level par 72. World No. 4 Justin Rose of England, the highest-ranked player in the ‘African Major', finished second last of the 12 players with one-over-par 73. South Africa's Garth Mulroy carded three-over-par 75. Mardan in control In Bangkok, Asian Tour veteran Mardan Mamat of Singapore fired 10 birdies in a brilliant nine-under-par 63 Thursday to earn a one-stroke lead in the first round of the King's Cup. Mardan, who stormed home with five birdies on the closing five holes, leads Supakorn Utaipat of Thailand and England's Chris Rodgers by one stroke at the Singha Park Khon Kaen Golf Club in northeastern Thailand. The 45-year-old's only blemish came with a par-three bogey on the 13th before he hit the birdie trail again. Supakorn, 22, was delighted with his encouraging start to the tournament. The $500,000 King's Cup is making its return after a year's absence following floods in Thailand last year. — Agencies