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Franco & Keuhe share
lead
Carlos Franco and 1998 U.S.
Amateur champion Hank Kuehne shot 7-under-par 65s today to share the first-round
lead in the Shell Houston Open.
Franco, who shuns the driving
range and shows up as late as possible for rounds, arrived at the tournament
Tuesday after spending the Easter holiday with his family in Paraguay. He brought
a supply of chipas, a cornbread-like food to remind him of home.
"I brought them down here
so I could eat them, to give me power," Franco joked, flexing his biceps.
Something worked for Franco.
He teed off with the morning group under clear, cool conditions and finished
with eight birdies and one bogey, equaling the 65 he shot in the first round
of the Honda Classic for his low round this year.
Franco had 15-foot birdie
putts on the fourth and fifth holes and his only bogey came on No. 10 after he
hit a 9-iron to the left. He birdied three straight holes, finishing with a 2-foot
birdie putt on No. 14.
"I hit a 7-iron 2 feet
from the pin," he said. "That was a great shot, my best shot of the day."
Kuehne went right to work,
starting on the back nine. He had pars on the first two holes and then ran in
birdies on seven of the next eight holes to tie Franco for the lead.
He bogeyed the par-4 fourth
hole to drop a shot back, but birdied No. 8 to tie for the lead.
"I've been working hard
on my game, it comes as easily as it goes," said Kuehne, who turned pro last
June after the U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2.
"Honestly, it seems like
another day of work. You come in each day and the emotions are the same. It's
great to be the co-leader, but the emotions are the same if I shoot 7-under or
3-over."
Craig Stadler, Kevin Sutherland,
Brian Gay. and Jerry Smith opened with 66s on the TPC at The Woodlands. Doug
Barron, Fred Funk, Dave Stockton Jr., and Paul Stankowski shot 67s.
Stadler had the second
double-eagle 2 on the PGA Tour this year, holing a 245-yard 3-wood shot in the
521-yard 15th hole.
"No matter where it was,
I knew I'd have a putt for an eagle," Stadler said. "It just flew right of the
fringe and took a little bounce. I couldn't see it from there. It went kind of
down over that little rise. In she went."
Not many fans got to see
the shot.
"Maybe 10 or 15 (fans)
and probably eight of them were marshals," Stadler said. "There were maybe 100-150
people around, but not many of them were at the green.
David Sutherland's double
eagle at the Honda Classic is the only other one on the PGA Tour this year.
Hal Sutton, with victories
in two of his last three tournaments, shot a 71. Defending champion Stuart Appleby
of Australia shot a 69.
John Daly and John Cook
had an interesting time on No. 13, a par-5 that features and an island greens
with two bridges that stick out like rabbit ears on a TV.
Daly's ball rolled through
the green and stopped on the bridge on the right. Cook, playing in the same group,
hit his approach on the left bridge.
Daly finished with a 74,
and Cook shot a 69.
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