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Fleisher leads after record 64
Bruce Fleisher wouldn't even let Hubert
Green sleep on it.
Hours after Green shot the best opening round in the 21-year
history of the U.S. Senior Open, Fleisher went one stroke better.
His 7-under-par 64 today tied the record for the lowest score in
any round of the Senior Open, matching Orville Moody's third round
in 1989.
Fleisher held a one-stroke lead over Green and was two strokes
in front of Dave Stockton, Isao Aoki, and Hale Irwin.
Irwin finished the 18th hole at Saucon Valley Country Club after
a 95-minute rain delay. Play was suspended for the day at 8:24 p.m.
EDT with nine players still on the course.
"The score I am standing on right now is probably not
indicative of how I hit the ball,'' Irwin said. "It was one of the
uglier 5-under-par rounds I've ever had.''
Jack Nicklaus shot a 67, which tied his best round in any Senior
Open. He won this championship in 1991 and '93.
"I haven't played a good round of golf in a long time,'' said
Nicklaus, who excited the gallery with his performance. "It was
kind of fun. I haven't seen anywhere near a major for a while
either.''
Jerry Bruner also shot a 67, while four players had 68s.
Defending champion Dave Eichelberger shot a 1-over 72.
Fleisher and Green sit atop the leaderboard for the second time
in a month. The two squared off in a playoff last month at The Home
Depot Invitational before Fleisher won it with a birdie on the
third extra hole.
Fleisher parred the first four holes today before finishing
the front nine with four birdies in his last five holes.
He birdied eight holes overall, including three straight
beginning at No. 14. He parred nine holes and bogeyed the 18th. His
longest putt was a 15-footer at No. 9.
"I started slow, but I kept playing and hit the ball well,'' he
said. "I was able to hit some shots from close. I feel good right
now, but a lot can happen in three days.''
Fleisher and Stockton benefited from playing in the same
threesome as their competitive juices were flowing.
"I tied him at five under (at No. 13) and I think I made him
mad,'' Stockton said. "He went nuts there at the end. We fed off
each other.''
Told what Stockton said, Fleisher joked: "Yeah, I saw him
eating peanuts and he didn't offer me any.''
They weren't the only ones playing with emotion. After making a
putt for a birdie on No. 11, Aoki did a little dance routine,
evoking a loud roar from the gallery.
"He said when he gets surprised, he dances like that,'' said
Nobi Kuga, Aoki's interpreter. "He said he's been playing so bad
that it's a fluke he played so good.''
It's no fluke how well Fleisher has been playing, though.
Fleisher, 51, has been dominant since joining the Senior PGA
Tour last year. He's No. 2 on the money list and is seeking his
fourth title of the year and 11th since coming aboard.
"I felt very relaxed. I can't even tell you why,'' Fleisher
said. "This sort of golf course, you have to stay in the fairway.
It's the only way to be competitive.''
Green sensed he would be involved in the competition when he
felt the butterflies in his stomach.
He overcame his nerves and shot his best round since a 62 in the
third round won him the Audi Senior Classic in March.
"I was talking to my caddie and said that I hadn't been this
nervous in a long time on the first fairway,'' Green said. "It's a
great feeling to get those butterflies jumping around in your
stomach again.''
Before Green's 65, only six golfers had shot a 66 in the opening
round of the Senior Open, most recently by Bob Charles in 1996.
Charles's round came on a par-72 course, with the other five on
par-71s.
Five golfers shot a 66 or better today.
"I don't think this is the most difficult golf course we would
play an Open on, but we are not playing the U.S. Open,'' Nicklaus
said. "We are playing the Senior Open. Most of the Senior Open
golf courses are set up a little softer than the U.S. Open,
probably far more suited for the games of fellows over 50.''
DIVOTS: Arnold Palmer, a native of Latrobe, Pa., attracted the
largest gallery even though he isn't a threat to win the
tournament. Palmer shot a 5-over 76. "I'm living on hope these
days, so I hope it's going to be a lot better,'' he said.
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