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D6


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KLMNO GOLF


Daly leads the surprises on the leader board open from D1


Andrews to play easier,” he said. At the moment McIlroy spoke, it was just after 1 p.m. And per- haps right then, the flags atop the grandstands awoke. With that, so did the Old Course. The first round of the British Open yielded a leader board with some of the right names, McIlroy and Woods among them, and many surprising ones, none more so than John Daly, the 1995 champion here who managed a 6-under 66 despite what would have to be considered the dis- traction of his own multicolored pants. The usual array of who-the- heck-is-that characters also joined the fray, with Louis Oos- thuizen — a South African who has never finished better than 73rd in a major — coming closest to matching McIlroy with a 65. Scotland’s Andrew Coltart, who spent the past two Opens work- ing as a television analyst be- cause he didn’t qualify to play, matched Daly with 66, as did England’s Steven Tiley, who had to win a three-man playoff in a qualifying event just to be here. The common thread among


that diverse group: They all be- gan play before noon. Indeed, of the 16 players who shot 67 or bet- ter, 14 teed off before 1 p.m. By the time Masters champion Phil Mickelson, who had a 2:20 p.m. tee time, reached the 16th tee, the wind had turned a fan’s um- brella inside-out. When Mick- elson made his only birdie of the day at 18 — he had a double bo- gey and 16 pars en route to 73 — it was raining.


Such was the distinction be-


tween a.m. and p.m. that Eng- lishman Paul Casey and Argenti- na’s Angel Cabrera, who went out at 1:31 p.m., endured a squall


BRITISH OPEN Par Scores


At St. Andrews (Old Course) In St. Andrews, Scotland Purse: $7.3 million


Rory McIlroy .........................33 30 — 63 -9 Louis Oosthuizen .................31 34 — 65 -7 John Daly ...............................31 35 — 66 -6 Andrew Coltart ....................33 33 — 66 -6 Steven Tiley ..........................32 34 — 66 -6 Bradley Dredge ....................33 33 — 66 -6 Peter Hanson .......................33 33 — 66 -6 Marcel Siem .........................32 35 — 67 -5 Nick Watney .........................33 34 — 67 -5 Lucas Glover .........................35 32 — 67 -5 Sean O’Hair ...........................30 37 — 67 -5 Tiger Woods .........................33 34 — 67 -5 Fredrik Andersson Hed ......32 35 — 67 -5 Alejandro Canizares ...........33 34 — 67 -5 Y.E. Yang ...............................34 33 — 67 -5 Lee Westwood .....................31 36 — 67 -5 Robert Rock ..........................34 34 — 68 -4 John Senden .........................33 35 — 68 -4 Ross McGowan ....................32 36 — 68 -4 Trevor Immelman ...............33 35 — 68 -4 Oliver Wilson ........................32 36 — 68 -4 Ross Fisher ...........................33 35 — 68 -4 Camilo Villegas ....................34 34 — 68 -4 Ryo Ishikawa ........................33 35 — 68 -4 Henrik Stenson ....................33 35 — 68 -4 a-Jin Jeong ............................32 36 — 68 -4 Shane Lowry .........................34 34 — 68 -4 Vijay Singh ............................35 33 — 68 -4 Ricky Barnes ........................33 35 — 68 -4 Paul Lawrie ...........................36 33 — 69 -3 Steve Marino ........................35 34 — 69 -3 Simon Dyson ........................34 35 — 69 -3 Robert Allenby .....................34 35 — 69 -3 Hunter Mahan ......................34 35 — 69 -3 Ernie Els .................................35 34 — 69 -3 Mark O’Meara ......................33 36 — 69 -3 Bo Van Pelt ...........................35 34 — 69 -3 Ignacio Garrido ....................34 35 — 69 -3 Robert Karlsson ...................33 36 — 69 -3 Dustin Johnson ....................33 36 — 69 -3 Paul Casey ............................34 35 — 69 -3 Retief Goosen .......................34 35 — 69 -3 Edoardo Molinari ................35 34 — 69 -3 Martin Kaymer .....................35 34 — 69 -3 Danny Chia ...........................32 37 — 69 -3 Ryan Moore ..........................35 35 — 70 -2 Thomas Bjorn .......................37 33 — 70 -2 Stewart Cink .........................35 35 — 70 -2 Justin Rose ............................35 35 — 70 -2 Chris Wood ...........................34 36 — 70 -2 Darren Clarke .......................34 36 — 70 -2 J.B. Holmes ...........................33 37 — 70 -2 Zane Scotland ......................34 36 — 70 -2 Tano Goya .............................36 34 — 70 -2 Kyung-tae Kim .....................32 38 — 70 -2 Mark Calcavecchia .............37 33 — 70 -2 Kevin Na ................................34 36 — 70 -2 Toru Taniguchi .....................33 37 — 70 -2 Charl Schwartzel .................40 31 — 71 -1 Tim Clark ...............................37 34 — 71 -1 Ian Poulter ............................34 37 — 71 -1 Jason Day ..............................36 35 — 71 -1 Kenny Perry ..........................35 36 — 71 -1 Stephen Gallacher ..............33 38 — 71 -1 Hirofumi Miyase ..................34 37 — 71 -1 Tom Lehman ........................34 37 — 71 -1 Graeme McDowell ..............37 34 — 71 -1 Steve Stricker ......................35 36 — 71 -1 Sergio Garcia .......................35 36 — 71 -1 a-Eric Chun ...........................34 37 — 71 -1 Thomas Aiken ......................36 35 — 71 -1 Heath Slocum .......................34 37 — 71 -1 Tim Petrovic .........................35 36 — 71 -1 Soren Hansen .......................37 35 — 72 E Todd Hamilton .....................35 37 — 72 E Seung-yul Noh .....................35 37 — 72 E Nick Faldo .............................36 36 — 72 E Soren Kjeldsen .....................36 36 — 72 E G.Fernandez-Castano ........35 37 — 72 E Yuta Ikeda .............................34 38 — 72 E Matt Kuchar .........................34 38 — 72 E a-Byeong-Hun An ................35 37 — 72 E Michael Sim ..........................37 35 — 72 E Tom Pernice Jr. ....................36 36 — 72 E Mark F. Haastrup .................34 38 — 72 E Colm Moriarty ......................35 37 — 72 E Scott Verplank .....................36 36 — 71 E Alvaro Quiros .......................35 37 — 72 E Miguel Angel Jimenez ........36 36 — 72 E Adam Scott ...........................36 36 — 72 E Geoff Ogilvy ..........................37 35 — 72 E Zach Johnson .......................33 39 — 72 E Ben Crane .............................34 38 — 72 E Brian Gay ...............................35 37 — 72 E Gareth Maybin .....................36 36 — 72 E D.A. Points ............................36 36 — 72 E Thomas Levet ......................35 38 — 73+1 Loren Roberts ......................34 39 — 73+1 Bill Haas ................................35 38 — 73+1 Jason Dufner ........................36 37 — 73+1 Alexander Noren .................35 38 — 73+1 Padraig Harrington .............37 36 — 73+1 Tom Watson .........................38 35 — 73+1 Mike Weir ..............................34 39 — 73+1 Davis Love III ........................37 36 — 73+1 Gregory Havret ....................35 38 — 73+1 a-Jamie Abbott ....................36 37 — 73+1 Tom Whitehouse .................35 38 — 73+1 Peter Senior ..........................36 37 — 73+1 Jeff Overton ..........................35 38 — 73+1 Marc Leishman ....................33 40 — 73+1 Luke Donald ..........................37 36 — 73+1 Angel Cabrera ......................37 36 — 73+1 Phil Mickelson ......................36 37 — 73+1 Rhys Davies ..........................37 36 — 73+1 Richard S. Johnson ..............35 38 — 73+1 Mathew Goggin ...................35 39 — 74+2 Martin Laird ..........................37 37 — 74+2 Shunsuke Sonoda ...............38 36 — 74+2 Koumei Oda ..........................35 39 — 74+2 Simon Khan ..........................37 37 — 74+2 Francesco Molinari .............39 35 — 74+2 Colin Montgomerie .............36 38 — 74+2 Bubba Watson .....................37 37 — 74+2 Darren Fichardt ...................38 36 — 74+2 Paul Goydos .........................36 38 — 74+2 Thongchai Jaidee ................37 38 — 75+3 Phillip Archer .......................35 40 — 75+3 Sandy Lyle ............................37 38 — 75+3


Yardage: 7,305; Par: 72 (33-36) First Round


as they reached the 17th green, let it pass, and then lamented their bad fortune. “He felt it was four shots tougher this afternoon,” Casey said of Cabrera, “although we’ve got no way of measuring.” McIlroy and the other leaders


aren’t as concerned about such measuring. Daly set the tone shortly after his 7:25 a.m. start. Wearing an outfit only he could assemble — a hat that didn’t match his sweater vest, a sweater vest that didn’t match his shirt,


and a shirt that didn’t match his pants, which were straight from an episode of “DoctorWho” — he began with two birdies, then birdied 8, 9, 10 and 11. Considering Daly is ranked


455th in the world, considering he has been suspended repeated- ly by the PGA Tour, considering he had gastric band surgery to deal with his burgeoning weight, there was little reason to believe he could shoot 66. But consider- ing he’s at St. Andrews, maybe it was reasonable.


zant enough of his own progress that he can reel off the competi- tive rounds he has played on the Old Course — none previously in an Open — without a tremen- dous amount of thought: 69, 69, 67, 68, 67, 68, 65, 69, and Thurs- day’s 63. “I’ve played so well around


here before,” he said, “and I real- ly felt that if I could come into this golf tournament in good form and playing well, I feel as if I’ve got a great chance.” McIlroy is also that rare young


PHIL NOBLE/REUTERS


Dark clouds gather as Adam Scott tees off on the 16th hole. Other players were fortunate to play in friendlier conditions. “You’re never going to get St. Andrews to play easier,” leader Rory McIlroy said.


“For me, it’s just a golf course


that not only brings great memo- ries, but it’s a memory before you’ve ever played it because of all the great players that have won and played it,” Daly said. “It’s a special place. It’s, to me, my favorite course all over the world.” McIlroy is en route to making such a statement, too. He is pre- cocious enough that, as a 16- year-old, he shot 61 at Royal Por- trush, a course of great renown in his home country. He is cogni-


SALLY JENKINS


Hiroyuki Fujita .....................38 37 — 75+3 Jason Bohn ............................37 38 — 75+3 Kurt Barnes ...........................38 37 — 75+3 Josh Cunliffe .........................36 39 — 75+3 Ryuichi Oda ..........................35 41 — 76+4 Cameron Percy ....................35 41 — 76+4 Ben Curtis .............................36 40 — 76+4 Justin Leonard .....................39 37 — 76+4 K.J. Choi .................................38 38 — 76+4 Paul Streeter ........................35 41 — 76+4 Jean Hugo .............................37 39 — 76+4 Jae-Bum Park .......................36 40 — 76+4 David Duval ..........................38 39 — 77+5 Anders Hansen ....................37 40 — 77+5 Katsumasa Miyamoto ........37 40 — 77+5 Jim Furyk ...............................38 39 — 77+5 Glen Day ................................37 41 — 78+6 a-Tyrell Hatton ....................40 38 — 78+6 George McNeill ....................39 39 — 78+6 Jerry Kelly .............................40 39 — 79+7 Rickie Fowler ........................37 42 — 79+7 Gary Clark .............................39 40 — 79+7 Simon Edwards ....................38 41 — 79+7 a-Victor Dubuisson .............39 41 — 80+8 Jose Manual Lara ................40 40 — 80+7 Ewan Porter ..........................41 40 — 81+9 a-Laurie Canter ....................41 40 — 81+9


Tee Times Friday


1:30 a.m. — Mark Calcavecchia, Peter Senior, Anders Hansen 1:41 a.m. — Louis Oosthuizen, Jeff Over- ton, Colm Moriarty 1:52 a.m. — Ignacio Garrido, Hirofumi Miyase, Shane Lowry 2:03 a.m. — Tom Lehman, Kevin Na, Marc Leishman 2:14 a.m. — Sandy Lyle, Bradley Dredge, Koumei Oda 2:25 a.m. — Simon Khan, Vijay Singh, Scott Verplank 2:36 a.m. — Luke Donald, Y.E. Yang, Ricky Barnes 2:47 a.m. — Toru Taniguchi, Robert Karlsson, Dustin Johnson 2:58 a.m. — Alvaro Quiros, Jerry Kelly, Katsumasa Miyamoto 3:09 a.m. — Peter Hanson, Francesco Molinari, Ben Curtis 3:20 a.m. — Paul Casey, Angel Cabrera, Rickie Fowler 3:31 a.m. — Miguel Angel Jimenez, Lee Westwood, Adam Scott 3:42 a.m. — Jim Furyk, Graeme McDow- ell, Geoff Ogilvy 3:58 a.m. — Hiroyuki Fujita, Steve Strick- er, Sergio Garcia 4:09 a.m. — Colin Montgomerie, Phil Mickelson, Retief Goosen 4:20 a.m. — Rhys Davies, Edoardo Moli- nari, Justin Leonard 4:31 a.m. — Zach Johnson, Martin Kaym- er, a-Eric Chun 4:42 a.m. — K.J. Choi, Bubba Watson, a- Victor Dubuisson 4:53 a.m. — Ben Crane, Richard S. John- son, Thomas Aiken 5:04 a.m. — Jason Bohn, Kurt Barnes, a- Laurie Canter 5:15 a.m. — Darren Fichardt, Jose Manu- al Lara, Heath Slocum 5:26 a.m. — Paul Streeter, Brian Gay, Gareth Maybin 5:37 a.m. — Tim Petrovic, Paul Goydos, Jean Hugo 5:48 a.m. — Gary Clark, D.A. Points, Dan- ny Chia


5:59 a.m. — Glen Day, Josh Cunliffe, a- Tyrell Hatton 6:10 a.m. — Jae-Bum Park, Geroge McNeill, Simon Edwards 6:41 a.m. — Paul Lawrie, Thomas Levet, Steve Marino 6:52 a.m. — Loren Roberts, Mathew Goggin, Marcel Siem 7:03 a.m. — Robert Rock, John Senden, Bill Haas 7:14 a.m. — Simon Dyson, Jason Dufner, Soren Hansen 7:25 a.m. — Todd Hamilton, Ryuichi Oda, Alexander Noren 7:36 a.m. — John Daly, Andrew Coltart, Seung-yul Noh 7:47 a.m. — Martin Laird, Nick Faldo, So- ren Kjeldsen 7:58 a.m. — David Duval, Ross McGo- wan, Trevor Immelman 8:09 a.m. — Gonzalo Fernandez-Casta- no, Ryan Moore, Charl Schwartzel 8:20 a.m. — Robert Allenby, Nick Wat- ney, Oliver Wilson 8:31 a.m. — Lucas Glover, Rory McIlroy, Tim Clark 8:42 a.m. — Thomas Bjorn, Hunter Ma- han, Shunsuke Sonoda 8:53 a.m. — Ian Poulter, Ernie Els, Stew- art Cink


9:04 a.m. — Sean O’Hair, Yuta Ikeda, Ross Fisher 9:15 a.m. — Tiger Woods, Justin Rose, Camilo Villegas 9:26 a.m. — Padraig Harrington, Ryo Ish- ikawa, Tom Watson 9:37 a.m. — Henrik Stenson, a-Jin Jeong, Matt Kuchar 9:48 a.m. — Jason Day, Chris Wood, Ken- ny Perry


9:59 a.m. — Mike Weir, Darren Clarke, Davis Love III 10:10 a.m. — Thongchai Jaidee, Fredrik Andersson Hed, J.B. Holmes 10:21 a.m. — Mark O’Meara, a-Byeong- Hun An, Stephen Gallacher 10:32 a.m. — Alejandro Canizares, Mi- chael Sim, Gregory Havret 10:43 a.m. — a-Zane Scotland, Tom Per- nice Jr., a-Jamie Abbott 10:54 a.m. — Bo Van Pelt, Phillip Archer, Ewan Porter 11:05 a.m. — Cameron Percy, Tano Go- ya, Kyung-tae Kim 11:16 a.m. — Mark F. Haastrup, a-Steven Tiley, Tom Whitehouse a-amateur


Daly has changed, but he’s still a colorful character jenkins from D1


definitive about Daly, given the whirls of his personal and professional lives, the heartbreaking dissipation, binges, divorces, and compulsive gambling that caused a winless streak from ’95 to 2004. But he may be in the midst of a genuine resurgence. He staggered through a disastrous 2008 in which he hurt his ribs, earned a six-month suspension from the PGA Tour for unbecoming conduct, and nearly topped 300 pounds. In February 2009 in an effort to get a grip on himself, he decided to undergo gastric band surgery. He says he hasn’t had a cocktail since. It’s allowed him to see what a little stamina and consistent practice might do for a player whose talent is still rampant. “I don’t know. I’m 44 years old,” he said. “I’ve learned a lot. I have never run from my mistakes. I’ve always been honest with you guys and everybody around me. You know, it’s how you come back. For me, I’m on a comeback.” Daly chose to have the procedure, which restricts the size of the stomach, at the behest of his daughter, who also has undergone it and lost 100 pounds.He says he can no longer tolerate beer, or junk food. “You just eat different,” he says.


“I can’t eat as much of the bad crap as I used to.” His weight has dropped to 195 pounds, and his drink of choice is Diet Coke. He says the thing he misses most is whole milk, which his stomach can’t handle any more either.


“I used to drink a half gal of that


a day,” he said. “When you were as hungover as I used to be, it was great. Got rid of everything.” Returning to St. Andrews, which Daly calls the site of his most sober major victory, is clearly restorative for him. It has caused him to imagine what it might be like to feel that way again. On the way to the course, before he ever struck a shot, he told his girlfriend, Anna Cladakis, “I love this course. It’s home. I’m going to win this thing.” “Really?” she asked. “I love this course,” he repeated. Daly played his round in the placid morning conditions, when St. Andrews was soft and still and covered by a fine gray mist, and the flags lay slack against their poles. The tranquillity seemed to imbue his swing, which was as relaxed as it was long and powerful, the yellow shaft of his driver a glint of color against the monochrome sky. “Magic,” remarked Cladakis, who followed him in the gallery wearing a matching purple paisley skirt, and plastic rain boots. “There’s just something peaceful about this place,” Daly said afterward. But keep in mind, just a short time ago, Daly’s moods were


STUART FRANKLIN/GETTY IMAGES


John Daly on his clothing line: “All of these pants, the good thing about them is you can get dressed in the dark, any shirt is going to match.”


uneven, and his competitive ego was fragile. In January at Torrey Pines he was so sick of struggling to make cuts that he publicly suggested he might retire. A few days off and conversations with friends such as Tim Herron convinced him that the impulse to quit was part of the normal frustration of grinding. “A lot of guys say it,” he said, “But I love the game too much. I think there’s not too many players that haven’t said it, but I was just the idiot that said it on TV.” It was a good decision for golf:


The game needs Daly’s personality, his jolting good-humor, his unaffectedness, and his willingness to admit his flaws. “Like I said, I’ve never ran from


my mistakes,” he said. “I’ve always been the kind of man that you’re supposed to be when you screw up. And I’ve screwed up an awful lot, not just on tour, but in other aspects of life.”


Of course, it can also use his dashes of bright color amid all the


respectable sweater vests. Take his dizzying entrance at the champions dinner on the eve of this tournament. The affair was one of pomp and pageantry, in which members of the Royal and Ancient sported traditional red coats. Daly showed up in a blazer of orange and blue sunbursts against a black background. Peter Dawson, chief executive of the R&A, said dryly, “I was sitting opposite him at dinner, so I had it all night. My eyesight survived.” His ensembles of the last couple


of days have set a new standard of comical garishness for his clothing line, called Loudmouth. “All of these pants, the good thing about them is you can get dressed in the dark, any shirt is going to match,” he said. It would be nice to believe that the clothes don’t reflect the inner man. Maybe Daly can play his unbridled game and take with him the inner peace he’s always found here.


jenkinss@washpost.com


player who appreciates history even before he makes it. He grew up studying Woods, and remem- bered the last 63 shot in a major, Tiger at the 2007 PGA Champi- onship at Southern Hills. “He lipped out for 62,” McIlroy recalled, correctly, and that very vision came to him as he strode toward the 17th green. He was al- ready 8 under, and there, at the Road Hole, he hit his 6-iron in to about three feet. The record slipped into his brain. “I started thinking to myself, ‘If I can birdie this hole, I’ve got a chance of birdieing the last,’ ” he said. Do the math: a birdie-birdie finish would have been 62, knee- knocking stuff. “That’s probably why I missed the putt,” he said, and that he did. He managed a birdie at 18, though, and finished with the eighth 63 in Open history, the first in 17 years, and the second at St. Andrews, joining Paul Broad- hurst in the third round in 1990. “It was a very pleasant round


of golf,” McIlroy said. Thursday morning, that it was. Who knows how many peo- ple will feel that way about the rounds to come, about the next three days? The wind’s nap is over, and the Old Course might just play like the Old Course. svrlugab@washpost.com


FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2010


OPEN NOTEBOOK Woods


gets going late in the first round


by Barry Svrluga


st. andrews, scotland — Tiger Woods introduced a new concept in his approach to a ma- jor championship Thursday, when he began the British Open at the Old Course with a 5-under- par 67. “I let the round mature,” he


said. The translation, apparently, is


that on a day in which many play- ers made birdies early, Woods got going late. He trails first-round leader Rory McIlroy by four shots not because he played poorly, but because he was just 1 under through six holes. “Most of the guys were under


early, even though I wasn’t,” Woods said. “I said, ‘Just let the round mature, just keep hanging in there and keep plugging along.’ It could have been a pretty good round today.” Woods’s ball-striking was ex- cellent throughout the day, the one error — a wayward drive into the thick left rough on 17 — led to his only bogey of the day. That bogey, though, could have been avoided, because he missed a four-foot putt for par. He also missed a makable birdie putt at 18.


Woods, though, said the new


Nike putter he put in his bag for this week — his first new putter in 11 years — worked well. “I’m very pleased with it,” he


said. “As I said, it comes off faster, and these greens are just the slowest I’ve seen in a long time, if ever. . . . It came off well, and I putted pretty good today.” The last remaining question


for Woods, then, was how he would be received by the Scottish crowds in his first post-scandal Open appearance. When starter Ivor Robson called his name into the microphone, there were only pleasant cheers. “They’ve always been respect- ful and enthusiastic here,” Woods said. “There’s no reason it would be any different. They were great out there today.”


Early morning for Marino


Steve Marino began his Open thusly: Bed at 9 p.m. Wednesday, alarm clock ring at 3:30 a.m. Thursday, at the practice range at 4:45, and the first tee time of the Open at 6:30. “I think that’s the earliest I’ve


ever woken up to play golf,” he said. Marino did just fine with the early start, shooting a bogey-free 3-under 69 in his first competi- tive round at St. Andrews. The Fairfax native and University of Virginia graduate began with eight pars, birdied 9, 10 and 12, and then parred in. His only real regret: a three-putt for par on the par-5 fifth, where he missed a four-footer. “I’ve been really looking for- ward to this week,” said Marino, who shared the second-round lead with Tom Watson in his Brit- ish Open debut last year at Turn- berry. “Today was a great start, and I’m really looking forward to the rest of the week.”


Watson’s ‘sluggish’ start


It appears there will be no magical run for Watson this year. The five-time British Open cham- pion, who is 60, bogeyed Nos. 2-4 to get off to a start he called “slug- gish,” and though those were his only bogeys of the day, his morn- ing round of 1-over 73 failed to take advantage of the calm condi- tions. “Never really got it going after


that,” Watson said. “I had some makable putts. . . . Really didn’t get the ball in the hole as well as I could have and didn’t hit the ball as well as I should have.” . . . The most famous bunker in


golf, the one along the left of the 17th green here, claimed another victim Thursday. Denmark’s An- ders Hansen hit his approach in the Road Hole bunker. Four shots later, he was finally out of it, mak- ing a quadruple-bogey 8. svrlugab@washpost.com


JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Tom Watson’s chances for a sixth British Open title took a hit after three bogeys in the first round.


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