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Otto leads from Norman
& Love
Tiger Woods battled back
from losing his ball with his first drive to stay in the hunt for the 132nd British
Open on Thursday.
But a string of other big
names fell by the wayside at windswept Royal St George's.
The world number one took
a triple-bogey seven on the opening hole before hitting back on the treacherous
Sandwich links to card a two-over-par 73 which left him five behind surprise first
round leader Hennie Otto of South Africa who had to qualify to make the tournament.
Favourite Woods at least
fared better than arch rival and tournament holder Ernie Els who stumbled to a
sorry seven-over 78 and Briton Colin Montgomerie who did not make it further than
the eighth hole before pulling out with a hand injury.
Instead it was left to the
likes of 48-year-old Australian Greg Norman, the Open winner last time it was
played at Royal St George's in 1993, and Tom Watson, 53, to help provide the fireworks.
Twice-winner Norman managed
an eagle at the long fourth and two birdies to lie just a stroke off the little-known
Otto's lead alongside American Davis Love III after a round of 69.
Fredrik Jacobson of Sweden
and South Korean S.K. Ho had 70s to complete the only five men under par in a
156-strong field.
Watson, a former five-times
champion whose first win came in 1975 before Woods was even born, would have joined
them at the top of the leader board had not a double-bogey, bogey finish not sent
him back to level 71.
The 27-year-old Woods had
showed impressive reserves of patience and determination to battle back after
his dismal start in light rain and strong winds following a pushed opening drive
into thick rough 10 yards off the fairway.
Despite the attentions of
a group of marshals, caddies and other bystanders, the ball could not be located
and he was forced to return to hit three off the tee for an ugly seven.
But Woods has not won eight
majors from 1997 for nothing and by the 18th hole had clawed his way back - four
birdies offsetting three bogeys.
"I've kept myself in
the tournament," Woods said. "I just had to bear down and focus. You
can shoot yourself straight out of this event and I just tried to be as patient
as possible and kept myself right in there.
"It was frustrating
to lose the ball at the first because the forecaddies told us they saw where the
ball had gone but we just couldn't find it."
Els conceded seven bogeys
in comfortably his worst Open return on his 13th attempt. He struggled for accuracy
off the tee and was uncharacteristically tentative with his putting.
The 40-year-old Montgomerie
was forced to quit on the eighth hole because of a freak hand injury sustained
when he fell over on his way to breakfast. He was four over par when the injury
meant he could not continue and he left the course in a buggy.
"It is very painful,"
Montgomerie told reporters. "The rough didn't help and even on the range
I was having trouble.
"When I shanked my
three iron at the sixth I realised that I shouldn't continue. I tried to hit my
second shot and it went about two yards because it was so painful to come through
the ball."
The drama around Woods's
lost ball and Montgomerie's exit capped a thrilling morning's golf on the difficult
links.
Norman said he surprised
even himself in such conditions. "There wasn't an easy shot out there,"
he told a news conference.
The Australian, who also
won the Open in 1986, has hardly played or practised all year after undergoing
shoulder surgery and he needed pain-killing injections to compete here.
Otto set the early clubhouse
pace with a three-under-par round in his first Open marred only by dropped shots
at the third and last but included two 30-foot birdie putts.
U.S. Masters champion Mike
Weir of Canada had a 74 and American Jim Furyk, who won the U.S. Open last month,
returned the same score.
Woods was not the only player
to struggle at the first. American tour professional Jerry Kelly ran up a seven-over-par
11 at the hole and then completed his misery by injuring his left hand hacking
out of rough at the 17th.
Like Montgomerie and former
U.S. PGA champion Paul Azinger, he later pulled out.
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