WORLD number one Dustin Johnson, in-form Rory McIlroy, and Aussie Marc Leishman suffered shock losses as the World Golf Championship Dell Technologies Match Play opened with a string of uspets on Wednesday, while Australians Jason Day and Cameron Smith both got off to winning starts.

Day defeated American James Hahn, while Cameron Smith downed Patrick Cantlay, while Leishman fell to Julian Suri.

Defending champion Johnson was spent spinning to a 3 & 1 defeat in his opening group game against Austria’s Bernd Wiesberger, the world number 56 who is seeded 52nd for this week’s tournament at the Austin Country Club in Texas.

Meanwhile McIlroy, who signalled his return to form on Sunday with a sensational victory at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, came back to Earth with a thud in his Group Six clash with Peter Uihlein.

Uihlein, the 57th seed, took control of the match over the front nine, notching three early birdies to reach the turn at 4-up.

A further birdie on the 10th took him 5 up, and although McIlroy staged a superb late rally with five straight birdies to trim Uihlein’s lead to two heading to the 17th, the 28-year-old held on to claim a 2 & 1 win.

Uihlein later said he was relieved to have held off McIlroy’s charge after the turn.

“It’s very difficult — he turned it on late. I felt that if I kept trying to give myself a chance I could get it done,” Uihlein said.

“You can’t really control what he’s going to do. It was like a boxing match — if you land a couple of jabs you assume he’s going to land one eventually. But I was able to hold him off, which was nice.” The round-robin format the WGC Match Play has adopted since 2015 gives Johnson and McIlroy the opportunity to turn around their campaigns, with two more group games to come on Thursday and Friday before the start of Saturday’s straight knockout rounds.

Elsewhere on Thursday (AEDT), Justin Thomas grabbed a 2-up win over Luke List in Group Two.

List was forced to putt for most of the round with a wedge after damaging his putter in frustration after a bogey on the sixth.

Thomas was made to sweat, however, after List won three holes on the back nine to move within one of halving the match.

Thomas, last year’s PGA Championship winner, held on to seal his win with a birdie on the 18th.

“I was thinking how bad that would hurt if I couldn’t get it done against someone putting with a wedge but he hit some great putts when he needed to,” Thomas said.

World number four Jordan Spieth, meanwhile, needed a late charge after the turn to see off South Africa’s Charl Schwartzel in their group match.

Spieth and Schwartzel were all square through 11 but Spieth edged into the lead on the 12th, when a penalty forced his opponent to drop before he eventually carded a bogey six.

That was followed by two quick birdies to put Spieth 3-up after 14 holes, helping set up a 2 & 1 victory.