Leaderboard (US unless stated) |
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| -7: D Johnson; -6: Z Johnson, R Streb, R Goosen, (SA), J Day (Aus), D Willett (Eng), P Lawrie (Sco); -5: J Niebrugge (amateur), L Oosthuizen (SA), C Schwartzel (SA), K Na, J Spieth |
| Selected others: -4: L Donald (Eng), D Howell (Eng), G Owen (Eng), M Warren (Sco); 2 P Mickelson, A Scott (Aus), P Casey (Eng); -1 J Rose (Eng), L Westwood (Eng); Par: R Fowler; +4 T Watson, T Woods; +11 N Faldo (Eng) |
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Dustin Johnson
upstaged playing partner and Grand Slam-chasing Jordan Spieth by posting a
seven-under-par 65 on day one of the 144th Open at St Andrews.
Johnson, who finished second behind Spieth at last month's US Open, leads a group including Scotland's 1999 Open champion Paul Lawrie and England's Danny Willett by one shot.
American Spieth, 21, is two shots off the lead after carding a 67.
Three-time winner Tiger Woods started with two bogeys in a miserable 76.
It was his worst score as a professional in the Open at St Andrews and came despite the benign conditions on the Scottish east coast.
Key tee times on Friday | |
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| 13:34 Ernie Els (SA), Brandt Snedeker (US), Tom Watson (US) | 14:34 Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Dustin Johnson (US), Jordan Spieth (US) |
| 14:56 Louis Oosthuizen (SA), Jason Day (Aus), Tiger Woods (US) | 09:44 Rickie Fowler (US), Justin Rose, Nick Faldo |
In the group with Lawrie and Willett on six under are fancied Australian Jason Day, two-time US Open champion Retief Goosen of South Africa, former Masters champion Zach Johnson and Robert Streb, both of the United States.
Alongside Spieth on five under are Louis Oosthuizen, winner at St Andrews in 2010, and his fellow South African and former Masters champion Charl Schwartzel.
Johnson and Spieth make hay
BBC Sport commentator Peter Alliss |
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| "I think Jordan Spieth is from another planet. He's so mature for his age. It seems like he's been 21 longer than my aunt was 39. He's a delight and fame does not seem to have changed him at this moment. He's remarkable and he has a brain of a 45-year-old." |
The home challenge
No Englishman has won the tournament since Sir Nick Faldo in 1992 and Yorkshireman Willett remained wary after his 66, which included an eagle at the 10th.
"It could be Armageddon-type stuff on Friday by the looks of the weather forecast," the 27-year-old told BBC Sport.
"The amount of wind there was today, if you played good golf there was a birdie chance on every hole.
"But when it gets to be much worse than that and it's raining too, it can be a lottery."
144th Open Championship |
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| Friday's coverage: Live on BBC TV, Red Button, Connected TVs and Radio 5 live sports extra from 09:00 BST, Radio 5 live from 10:00 and tablets, mobiles and app from 06:30. |
A gaggle of Englishmen recorded 68s on day one, including former world number one Luke Donald, David Howell and Greg Owen.
World number eight Justin Rose and Lee Westwood, another former world number one, shot 71s.
Westwood, who is yet to win a major, bogeyed his last three holes and blamed his late meltdown on a delay caused by a child picking up a ball which JB Holmes hit into a bush.
"I cooled down and stiffened up a bit," said the 42-year-old Westwood.
"If you can't get a quick ruling at the home of golf, where can you get one? We should have been able to play through."
Not so golden oldies
It was a struggle for two legends playing in their final Opens, with five-time winner Tom Watson signing for a 76 and three-time winner Faldo an 11-over 83, which included five bogeys and an eight at the par-five 14th.
"You can't fall out of a TV tower and come and play in an Open. Silly boy," said Faldo, who would normally be commentating on the action.
Watson's fans were wearing masks to mark the 65-year-old's final Open. "Those are ugly masks. I told them there's way too many wrinkles," joked the American. "It kind of scared me looking at those, like geez, that guy is ugly."
But one former champion did shine, and brightly. John Daly, winner in 1995, dropped four shots on the back nine but the 49-year-old still carded one under par in some eye-catching trousers.
John Daly is nicknamed 'Wild Thing'
"It looks like someone has eaten some weird coloured ice cream and thrown up," said BBC Radio 5 live commentator Jay Townsend.
"I've seen wallpaper like John Daly's trousers on Homes Under The Hammer," added Peter Alliss on BBC Two.
Tiger's travails
Road hole woe
It will be wet and windy early on Friday,
with players out later in the day seeing calmer conditions
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