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Morgan returns to take
first day lead
Gil Morgan marked his return
to the Senior PGA Tour with a 5-under-par 65 today for a one-stroke lead over
Larry Nelson and Jim Dent in the Emerald Coast Classic.
Morgan missed the first
eight tournaments of the season because of a pulled rib muscle.
Morgan tested his ribs
last weekend in the Legends of Golf, an unofficial money event in which he teamed
with Hubert Green to finish third. Then he aggravated the injury playing in a
pro-am Thursday.
He said he improved dramatically
after adding treatment by a chiropractor for the first time to the physical therapy
he has been getting since being injured in December while lifting weights.
"I was really skeptical"
about being able to play after Thursday's round, Morgan said. "I wasn't sure
I was going to be able to survive."
Morgan in fact thrived.
He holed out a 160-yard 7-iron approach for eagle on the par-4, 406-yard first
hole, then added five birdies against two bogeys.
"It's nice to get back
and it's nice to have a good first round," Morgan said. "I was pretty elated.
I was almost up to speed."
Following Nelson and Dent
on the scoreboard were John Jacobs, Al Geiberger, Green, Jim Colbert and Hugh
Baiocchi, all at 67 on The Moors Golf Club's 6,784-yard layout.
"No bogeys," said Jacobs,
who had three birdies and 15 pars on his card. "I can't believe that was me."
Jacobs, admitting to past
futility in Florida, said it would be an upset if he won. He did, however, note
that this Scottish-style course is unusual for Florida because it isn't hemmed
in by housing developments and has relatively few water hazards.
"This tournament is famous
for down to the last hole," Jacobs said. "I'm pretty sure we'll get another one
this year."
The first three Emerald
Coast Classics from 1995-97 produced playoffs. Then Dana Quigley won by one stroke
in regulation in 1998, and Bob Duval by two last year.
Duval's victory made golf
history because minutes later his son, David, won The Players Championship. The
elder Duval got off to a slow start in defense of his title, shooting 73.
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