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Wednesday, June 12, 2002

Tiger's up for another Open test




The Associated Press

        FARMINGDALE, N.Y. — Tiger Woods emerged through a corridor of fans about 100 yards down the 10th fairway and turned toward the tee box, unaware that Mark Calcavecchia already was standing over his ball, ready to launch his tee shot.

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Tiger Woods watches his shot on the sixth hole.
(AP photos)
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        Woods smiled and stood his ground in the line of fire. He never flinched when Calcavecchia's drive zipped well over his head.

        It might have been the safest Woods felt all day.

        Put a club in his hand, and that's where the U.S. Open gets a little frightening.

        “I don't know if the golfing public who plays here would want to have it set up like this for them every day,” Woods said Tuesday after his first full practice round for the U.S. Open since arriving at Bethpage State Park.

        He first toured the Black Course two weeks ago and called it the toughest par-70 he had ever played. Nothing about his practice round made Woods change his mind.

        “It's set up so difficult,” he said. “It's going to be a test for all of us.”

        Woods seems well-equipped. He already has won three times this year, beating Phil Mickelson at Bay Hill, Colin Montgomerie in Germany and many top players at the Masters.

        “It's a very difficult challenge to compete against him, because he's able to do things with the golf ball that not many can even envision,” Mickelson said. “A lot of people see that as a difficulty, and it is, but it's also a wonderful challenge.”

        The other challenge is the Black Course.

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Tiger's group walks up to the 18th green.
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        Fairways aren't much wider than a two-lane country road, framed on both sides by rough that is ankle-high and extremely thick.

        “It's like trying to hit out of peanut butter,” David Duval said.

        The greens are not as severe as other courses, but they are super slick and could seem like linoleum floors by the end of the week.
       “When you're on the tee, you're thinking, 'Geez, I'd better hit it in the fairway,”' Sergio Garcia said. “When you're in the fairway, you're thinking, 'I've got to hit a good shot to the right spot on the green.' And then the greens are really fast.

        “I think it's probably the toughest tournament in the world.”

        No argument from Woods on that, either.

        “It takes a lot of energy out of you to play this championship, to play it well and to contend,” he said. “By the end of the week, you're pretty fried.”

        While his U.S. Open victory at Pebble Beach two years ago was the most dominant performance in the 142-year history of the majors, Woods says the Open is the most difficult of all the majors to win.

        Especially this year.

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Mark Calcavecchia and Jose Maria Olazabal walk through the high grass on the 10th hole.
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        The Black Course already is known as a beast. The most famous landmark on the course is a sign on the first tee that warns anyone who pays $31 during the week that it is recommended “only for highly skilled golfers.”

        Then, the USGA worked its magic — some might say sorcery — by putting the rough on steroids and pinching the fairways. Volunteers are equipped with tiny yellow flags to mark balls that land in the rough; otherwise, the players might never find them.

        “I don't think anyone will disagree that you need to drive the ball well,” Woods said.

        The Black Course is 7,214 yards, the longest par-70 course in U.S. Open history. Woods spent his practice round trying to figure out where to hit the ball, and with which club.

        He hit 3-wood into the left rough on No. 1 for the second straight day, then reloaded with a 2-iron and found the short grass. Determined to find the fairway on the 489-yard fifth hole, he hit another 2-iron, then a 7-iron to the green.

        In all, he hit driver only five times Tuesday.

        “Any hole you hit it in the fairway, you've got an advantage,” Davis Love III said. “And any hole you hit it in the rough, you're looking at a bogey.”

        That's the way it usually is at a U.S. Open, which claims to be the toughest test in golf and almost always wins the debate.

        Only 12 players have finished a U.S. Open under par dating to 1995 at Shinnecock Hills, the last time it was held on Long Island. Compare that to 17 players under par at the Masters this year, 36 players who broke par at the PGA Championship in Atlanta, and 25 players at last year's British Open at Royal Lytham and St. Annes.

        Some USGA officials have suggested a record score for this U.S. Open because of the relatively flat greens, although no one in the 156-man field agrees.

        About the only conclusion that seems safe is Woods will be a big favorite, especially since he has won six of the last 10 major championships.

        Adding to the hype — Woods will try to become the first player since Jack Nicklaus in 1972 to win the first two legs of the Grand Slam. Woods already has won his own version of the slam — four in a row, just not in a calendar year.

        “Every time somebody wins the first one, they talk about a Grand Slam,” Love said. “Obviously, with Tiger holding them all at once, there's somebody out there that people honestly believe can win it.”

        This one could be his stiffest test — not only from the Black Course, but from a raucous New York gallery that has turned ho-hum practice rounds into a three-ring circus.

        The world's No. 1 player has a new name this week — Ti-guh.

        “I've been out here for a few years now, and I don't think I've ever seen the excitement level that I've seen this early in the week,” he said. “The fans are definitely into it. A couple of times, you've got to remind them it's only Tuesday.

        “It's really going to be interesting on Saturday and Sunday, especially when the heat and humidity and the beverage of their choice have taken effect.”

        By then, everyone will have a better idea how tough the Black Course really is.

Complete golf coverage and Tristate golf course guide
Goosen's a grateful Open champ
U.S. Open Notebook
U.S. Open tee times



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