| Tewell
takes narrow advantage Before
heading to the first tee Saturday, Doug Tewell spent about half an hour on the
driving range adjusting his swing. Two
shots into the round, the work started paying off. Tewell
holed a 6-iron from 173 yards for eagle on the first hole to spark a round of
6-under 66 and give him a one-stroke lead at the Legends of Golf. ``I
poured it right at the hole,'' Tewell said. ``I equate it to NASCAR. The car ran
well after I made the adjustment.'' Tewell
stood at 9-under 135. He'll be paired again Sunday with Australia's Stewart Ginn,
who shot 67 to finish one stroke back, and also got a charge out of Tewell's sizzling
start. ``We saw
that, and then everyone decided to start firing away at flags, and away we went,''
Ginn said. Another
stroke back was Tom Jenkins, who shot the low round of the day (65), to finish
tied for third with Hale Irwin (70). Tewell
was two shots behind Dave Eichelberger and playing well last week in Pensacola
before storms hit and halted play on the 10th hole. Eichelberger got the rain-shortened
victory, and Tewell was left to wonder what might have been. Not
for long. He's
back in the hunt again, and hoping to become a more familiar face on the Senior
PGA Tour, a collection of 50-and-older players that he knows is in need of a new
dose of star power. ``I
can't think of much Doug Tewell has done for the senior tour other than pluck
about $4 million out of it,'' Tewell conceded. ``All I can do is put my name up
there enough so that people will say, 'Hey, he's up there a lot.''' This
is the 25th anniversary for the Legends, the tournament largely credited with
spawning the senior tour. The
tournament is being played on the King & Bear Course at World Golf Village,
a layout designed by Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, neither of whom are among
the ``legends'' in this 57-player field. Despite
the lack of some of the biggest names, winning the Legends still has its rewards
-- most notably, the $306,000 first prize, which is the largest on tour so far
this season. Irwin
is going for his third victory of the young season. He came into Saturday one
stroke off the lead, and finished at 7 under after a round of 70 that could have
been better. The
tour's money leader underclubbed on the par-3 14th and hit into the water. His
third shot failed to make it out of the rough and he made double bogey. He finished
with two birdies to work his way back up the leaderboard. Tewell's
only bogey came on the par-5 18th, when he left his lay-up second shot at an awkward
distance -- 48 yards -- and had to ease up on a wedge to get the ball over a high
bunker, yet still stop on the green. He wound up in the bunker and needed two
putts to get down. ``I
mis-hit the third shot, I mis-hit the sand shot and I mis-hit the putt,'' Tewell
said. ``Three misses in a row -- that's always bad news.'' Ginn,
meanwhile, made birdie on No. 18, and a three-stroke advantage was trimmed to
one. ``It's a
game now,'' Ginn said. ``Now, we've just got to go out and play golf tomorrow.''
First-round leader
Ed Dougherty, hampered by a cold, shot 73 and fell fourstrokes behind. Divots Bruce
Lietzke teamed with Bill Rogers to run away with the two-man, best-ball format
that most of the older players competed in Friday and Saturday. Players can only
enter one event, and Lietzke, 50, chose to pair with his college roommate to vie
for the $48,000 first prize instead of the six-figure winner's check in the main,
medal-play event. ``It's not the first time I've passed up money,'' Lietzke said.
``Golf isn't in my top 10 priorities, but friendships are.'' ... For the first
time since 1993, the Legends is a medal-play event. For the first time ever, it
counts on the official money list. ... Tom Kite shot a 71 despite a 6 and 7 on
the 15th and 16th holes. He four-putted No. 15 from about 10 feet. ... Larry Nelson
made five straight birdies to tie the best streak on the senior tour this season(Lietzke,
Mike Hill). Nelson shot 67 to finish at 143.
Email
this page to a friend | Return
to top of page |