|
North/Colbert shoot 59
to lead day one
Andy North the television
analyst would have loved what Andy North the golfer did today.
Making his debut on the
Senior PGA Tour after seven years in the TV booth, North teamed with another
former commentator, Jim Colbert, to shoot a 13-under-par 59 for the lead after
the opening round of the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf.
North and Colbert finished
three shots ahead of three pairings - Tom Watson-Lanny Wadkins, David Graham-Bruce
Fleisher and Hubert Green-Gil Morgan - in the two-man, best-ball tournament on
the Slammer and Squire Course at World Golf Village.
Although the tournament
is only an exhibition, the first round offered a nice dose of confidence for
North, who hasn't played much competitive golf since the early 1990s.
"I hit some nice shots,"
said North, the two-time U.S. Open champion, who became eligible for the Senior
Tour with his 50th birthday last week. "At the beginning, I was a little scratchy.
But if this were a medal tournament, I only would've made one bogey. I really
played pretty well."
North said Colbert told
him to approach the tournament as if it were being played under regular medal
rules - with each man doing his own thing.
That mindset helped them
get off to a great start. On No. 1, North hit his approach shot to 15 feet and
sank the putt for birdie. Colbert followed with three straight birdies and the
TV team was off and rolling.
"I didn't know what to
expect from Andy, other than that he'd be excited," Colbert said. "Excitement
is usually good for an athlete. Then, when he made that putt on No. 1, I knew
he had settled down."
Also hot were Watson and
Wadkins, both of whom turned 50 in the past six months.
Smiling and decked out
in green for St. Patrick's Day, Watson sank a 20-foot putt on No. 7 for his third
birdie of the day.
Wadkins played his approach
shots to inside two feet on Nos. 8 and 9 for easy birdies.
"Tom's playing exceptionally
well," Wadkins said. "He played beautiful golf today, a lot of great shots. It
was a very solid round."
Watson said the cracked
heel he suffered a few weeks ago while trying to jump a fence didn't bother him.
He rode the 6,911-yard course in a cart - as allowed on the Senior Tour - then
put on a stabilizing boot after completing the round.
"My foot's fine," Watson
said. "It's not affecting the way I play. But if I had to walk 18 holes, it might
get sore."
Watson and Wadkins played
alongside Jack Nicklaus and Raymond Floyd to form the most intriguing foursome
of the day. But the Golden Bear continued to struggle and offered up little magic
to the large gallery that followed. The team finished at 4-under.
Errant and off-target,
Nicklaus hit his tee shot out of bounds on No. 8, forcing him to pick up and
let Floyd play out the hole on his own. On No. 18, Nicklaus closed his dismal
day by hooking his tee shot into a water hazard.
"Lanny Wadkins and Tom
Watson played well, my partner Ray Floyd played well - I watched," Nicklaus said.
DIVOTS: Green and
Morgan are the defending champions. Morgan was making his 2000 debut on tour
after overcoming a pulled rib muscle. ... Shell's Wonderful World of Golf named
Gary Player the new "ambassador" for the made-for-TV series. Player will replace
Gene Sarazen, who died in May. The first match, to be played in April and aired
in October, will pit David Duval against Ernie Els. Player and Nicklaus will
square off in July. ... The foursome including Nicklaus, Watson, Floyd and Wadkins
accounted for 147 PGA Tour victories.
Email this page to a friend | Return
to top of page
|