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Friday, July 18, 2003

Surprises abound at quirky British Open course


Norman shows old form, qualifier beats odds for lead

The Associated Press

[IMAGE] Tiger Woods plays out of heavy rough on the first hole, where he lost the ball during first-round play at the British Open.
(Associated Press photo)
| ZOOM |
SANDWICH, England - The British Open was full of mystery Thursday.

How could Tiger Woods hit a tee shot into a small patch of thick grass before thousands of people without the ball being found?

Can Greg Norman, winless in five years and without a major since he ruled Royal St. George's a decade ago, conspire with fate to capture another claret jug?

More importantly, who's Hennie Otto?

A wild and windy day at Royal St. George's unleashed a slew of surprises, none greater than Otto making one long putt after another for a 3-under 68 and a one-stroke lead in the first round of the British Open.

Everyone said this was a quirky course. It didn't take long for the proof to pile up.

Woods lost a ball on his first tee shot, made triple bogey and had to birdie two of the last four holes just to shoot 73.

"You can shoot yourself right out of this event," Woods said. "I just tried to be as patient as possible."

Ernie Els, trying to become the first player in 20 years to repeat as British Open champion, went 18 holes without a birdie and shot 78, his worst ever in this major.

David Toms and David Duval were among four past major winners who didn't break 80.

Norman, who has played only two tournaments this year, hit the kind of shots he did 10 years ago and got similar results, a 69 that left him one shot behind with Davis Love III.

Still, the biggest surprise was Otto, who had to play a 36-hole qualifier earlier this week just to get a tee time at the British Open.

"You've got to relax and take what the course gives you," Otto said.

Royal St. George's certainly doled it out.

Only five players managed to break par in the first round, the lowest number since no one did at Carnoustie in 1999.

Duval and Toms were among 25 players who didn't break 80.

Norman, meanwhile, played like the Shark of old.

Is he back?

"If I get myself in position after the first two rounds, hopefully momentum will start to build," Norman said. "I think 69 is a good start to that momentum."

At times, it looked as if he never left, especially on the par-5 fourth. From 194 yards, Norman punched a 4-iron that scooted up the severe shelf of the green and trickled down the slope to 6 inches for a tap-in eagle.

Tom Watson flirted with the lead for the second straight time in a major. He fell apart at the end, a double bogey-bogey finish for 71.

Also at even-par 71 was Charles Howell III, Fred Couples and Gary Evans, known best for losing his ball on the 17th hole at Muirfield last year.

Woods can relate.

He knew he was in deep rough, and it wasn't long before he realized he was in deep trouble. As he walked up the first fairway, he saw a search party of two dozen people in a desperate attempt to find his ball.

"Did you guys see where it went?" Woods inquired of thousands of fans, who pointed him this way and that as his frustration grew.

Woods cursed as he got into a cart for the long ride back to the tee. He picked up two birdies, then gave them back with three consecutive bogeys by driving into bunkers and into more rough, one shot traveling some 15 yards.

The good news?

"I kept myself in the tournament," Woods said.

That was no small task on a links that punished players when they least expected it.




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Surprises abound at quirky British Open course
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