Hot favourite Tom Watson needed
some inspiration to get round Royal County Down yesterday - from
American legend Byron Nelson.
The eight-time Major winner
struggled to card a one under par 70 and admitted: "I needed
help from Byron Nelson."
The 53 year old drew the biggest
gallery of the day in a threeball with Seiji Ebihara and John
Morgan, carding an eagle, three birdies and four bogeys on a
relatively calm morning.
And in the end he had to revert to some words of wisdom he received
from Nelson on his last visit here in the early '90s, to negotiate
the more difficult holes.
He said: "I had some great
advice from Byron and I remember some of it. Of course, being
my age I don't remember all of it but I remember some of it.
"There are some shots
on the golf course when I remember the advice being, 'make sure
you hit it short here', or 'go right here' and 'don't go into
the middle of the green'.
"Some of those comments
are coming back and making sense. Whether I can do it or not
is another story."
Watson said on Wednesday that
he needed to get to know the course in order to attack and add
the Senior title to his five Opens crowns.
But he admitted yesterday that
he still doesn't quite know how to handle the quirky links with
its blind tee shots and difficult greens.
"One of the things that
is necessary on this golf course is to learn how to play it.
I don't think I fully understand how to play or nearly understand
how to play.
"I am still feeling my
way around for certain shots but the course is very difficult
to understand. The were quite a few blind shots and you have
to understand how the ball enters the green."
He added: "I didn't hit
the ball particularly well today or too close to the hole. The
wind didn't blow and the golf course was there for the taking."
With only a light breeze for
the early starters, Watson opened in brilliant fashion, firing
a four iron to six feet for an eagle at the par five opening
hole.
But a bogey at the second showed
that he wasn't quite firing on all cylinders and in the end he
was happy to escape with four bogeys on his card.
"I turned around and made
a stupid bogey ion number two," he confessed. "I put
it in the bunker and failed to get up and down. Almost failed
to get it out of the bunker! Then it was a mini struggle the
rest of the round."
After a bogey at the eighth
where he drove in the left rough, Watson hit a six iron to 25
feet at the picture postcard ninth and drained the putt to turn
in one under par.
A bogey at the 479 yard par
five 12th threatened to ruin his day but he fought back, rifling
a seven iron to three feet at the difficult 13th.
Another bogey at the 15th was
erased at the driveable 16th where his tee shot found the front
edge of the green and he two-putted for his three.
"I had an eagle on one
and then that bogey on 12 equalised my round out," he said.
But his bogey six was almost
a double bogey as playing partner Seiji Ebihara made an eagle
and 13 of the 18 players who had already played the hole made
a birdie.
Watson pushed his three-wood
tee shot right, pulled a four-wood into more rough and then half
shanked his third through the green from where he took three
more to get down.
"Par was the worst score
I should have made and it should have been birdie," said
Watson. "I wasted a shot there. Overall I didn't keep the
ball in play as well as I should and didn't hit the ball as close
as I should. My swing doesn't vary too much but I will have it
sorted out my tomorrow."
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© Brian Keogh 2002
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