| Estes
leads after opening 65 All
of that tinkering may be coming together for Bob Estes, who shot a 5-under-par
65 in windy conditions Thursday to take a two-stroke lead in the Colonial. Estes
had a bogey-free round to match his best score of the year and finish two strokes
ahead of a group of nine players. The former University of Texas player birdied
the first two holes and also closed with two straight birdies. ``The
winds were difficult, but I managed to combat the wind for the most part,'' Estes
said. ``A lot of good shots didn't turn out good, or some mishit ones turned out
OK. It was difficult to pull the right club.'' The
breeze was blowing as usual over the historic 7,080-yard layout known as Hogan's
Alley, but the 10-20 mph wind gusted throughout the day and swirled in different
directions. David
Duval, Steve Jones and Steve Lowery were at 67, along with Esteban Toledo, Scott
Verplank, Bob Tway, Brandt Jobe, Frank Lickliter and Joel Edwards. Lowery
was 4 under through 10 holes and then had seven straight pars. But his round-ending
bogey at the 402-yard ninth hole, when his approach found a bunker behind the
green, took away sole possession of second place as the last of the 67s to finish.
Only 34 of the
124 players were able to break par. Sergio
Garcia, playing as a defending champion on the PGA Tour for the first time, shot
a 76. He began with an eagle on his second hole, the 609-yard No. 11, but had
eight bogeys and no birdies after that in his worst round of the year. ``There's
not much to talk about,'' said Garcia, who hit just nine of 18 greens in regulation.
``What can you say about a 76? I got to playing bad, then got worse.'' Ben
Hogan, a five-time Colonial winner, is the only person to win the tournament in
consecutive years, and he did it twice (1946-47 and 1952-53). Even
when Estes is playing well, such as when had two wins and four other top-10 finishes
the last six tournaments a year ago to complete his best PGA season, he is constantly
making changes to his clubs and his game. ``That
was good, but I'm looking for great. I want to be prepared to play any course
in any conditions, and be adaptable and be ready to change,'' Estes said. ``I've
spent 13 years in R&D (research and development). I'm planning on playing
a whole lot better.'' Estes,
ninth on the money list last year but 44th this year, played much better Thursday.
The straighter shot that has replaced his high fade was better adapted for the
windy conditions, and his new putting style worked. Three
of his birdie putts were less than 5 feet, but Estes made a 25-footer on the 400-yard
second hole and a 40-footer on the par 3 8th. Estes
changed his putting after finishing no better than 23rd, and being 44th or worse
four times, in his last six tournaments. ``I've
been hitting the ball real well for the most part, but not putting that good,''
he said. ``So I figured I'd better try something new, so I revamped my putting
... got a new putter, a longer putter, standing taller and changed my grip.''
He needed 27
putts in the first round. Jones,
the 1996 U.S. Open champion who has had rotator cuff problems since his last win
at the 1998 Quad City Classic, was 5-under par through 11 holes but couldn't maintain
the pace. Jones
had a bogey on his 13th hole, the 246-yard par-3 No. 4, and gave up another stroke
two holes later when he missed a two-foot putt. ``The
last year or so, it has felt a lot better and I'm able to practice more,'' Jones
said. ``It just takes time. It takes months and months and months, sometimes years,
to get that stroke back. I feel like I'm starting to turn a corner a little bit.''
In 12 tournaments
this year, Jones has missed seven cuts, withdrawn once and finished no better
than 35th. Tom
Watson, who skipped this week's Senior PGA Tour event, Corey Pavin and Carl Paulson
were among 13 players at 2-under 68. Duval
and Paulson were both 4 under through their first 11 holes before getting to Colonial's
famed ``horrible horseshoe'' -- Nos. 3-5, where the fourth hole is sandwiched
by the course's longest par 4s. Duval
had bogeys at Nos. 3-4, getting one of the strokes back with a birdie at No. 8.
Paulson had a bogey at the long par 3, and then ended his round withanother bogey. Divots Robert
Damron and Fred Funk, both citing injury, withdrew after opening 77s. ... Shigeki
Maruyama, the winner at the Byron Nelson Classic last week, had four consecutive
birdies, on Nos. 9-12, but also had seven bogeys in a 72. Ben Hogan in 1946 is
the only player to win the Colonial and the Dallas PGA Tour stop in the same year.
... Pavin, who got the last of his 14 PGA Tourwins in the 1996 Colonial, had a
hole-in-one on the 178-yard 13th. Email
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