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Watson & Quigley
share opening honours
Tom Watson has shot a scintillating
five-under-par 65 for a share of the U.S. Open lead with qualifier Brett Quigley
while defending champion Tiger Woods has eked out a scrappy opening round of 70.
An inspired Watson, at the
age of 53, eagled the par-four 12th and birdied two of his last three holes on
Thursday to record his lowest score at a U.S. Open since 1987 on "a very
special day".
Justin Leonard, the 1997
British Open champion, and fellow American Jay Don Blake were a further stroke
back on 66 while Australia's Stephen Leaney and Jim Furyk shared fifth place on
67.
"Who would have thought,
who would have expected that I would have shot a round like that today,"
Watson said after he bounced back from a bogey-five at the 10th, his first hole,
with some magical golf.
"I came here to play
my best and I'm hitting the ball well enough. It's just a matter now of being
able to deal with the pressure well enough at our national open."
Woods, bidding for his third
U.S. Open crown in four starts and the ninth major of his career, initially struggled
on the difficult greens at Olympia Fields Country Club and was one over par after
14 holes.
But the world number one,
who won last year's tournament by three shots at Bethpage Black, resurrected his
round by hitting a superb three-iron approach to 20 feet at the 555-yard sixth
hole before sinking the eagle putt.
In overcast conditions,
he then missed a birdie chance from 12 feet on seven, scrambled a par on eight
and bogeyed nine after finding a greenside bunker and failing to get up and down.
That left the 27-year-old
fives strokes off the early lead, but importantly still in the tournament.
"I wished I could have
finished better but this golf course is so difficult," Woods said. "If
you get too aggressive on some of the pin positions and short-side yourself, you're
making bogey.
"Consequently, I fired
away from just about every flag.
"In a major championship,
you just have to keep plodding along. I made 15 pars today, and unfortunately
I had a couple of bogeys.
"I didn't hit the ball
off the tee as well as I needed to, but I got it around and kept myself in the
tournament."
Woods had teed off with
twice winner Ernie Els and U.S. amateur champion Ricky Barnes at the par-four
10th, reeling off eight pars before bogeying the par-four 18th, where he pulled
his drive under the lip of a fairway bunker.
British Open champion Els,
winner of the 1994 and 1997 U.S. Opens, salvaged pars on his first two holes after
twice finding fairway bunkers off the tee, and then moved to one under with a
birdie-three at the 414-yard 14th.
The big-hitting South African,
who won four titles in his first five starts of the season, solidly parred the
remaining holes for an opening 69.
"The greens are really
difficult to putt, especially if you get past the hole," said the 33-year-old
Els.
"But I'm happy with
the way I played. I didn't get much out of it but anything under 70 is good for
the first round."
The 33-year-old Quigley,
yet to win on the PGA Tour, did not make the halfway cut in his two previous U.S.
Open starts but stormed into contention at Olympia Fields in the afternoon sunshine.
He mixed three birdies with
a bogey to reach the turn in 34 and, after dropping another shot at the par-four
10th, stormed home with four birdies in the last seven holes to finish the day
at five under.
"I never felt nervous
today and just played well. I felt good with the putter and managed to keep the
momentum going all the way," said Quigley, who missed five successive cuts
on this season's PGA Tour.
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