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Jimenez passes Watson for British Open lead

PAUL NEWBERRY
AP National Writer

TURNBERRY, Scotland – On the eve of the British Open, Tom Watson got a modern-day text message from Jack Nicklaus’ wife. Then it was time to turn back the clock at Turnberry.

Thirty-two years after his epic “Duel in the Sun” with the Golden Bear, Watson took advantage of pristine conditions on the very same course to shoot a stunning 5-under 65 on Thursday. He held the lead most of the day until Spain’s Miguel Angel Jimenez claimed the top spot in the early evening with a 64, only one shot off the record for lowest score in any major championship.

Still, it was Watson, a five-time Open champion, who maintained the lead role – if only for a day.



“Not bad for an almost 60-year-old,” said Watson, who turns that age in September.

He had been practicing well all week, and got an extra boost a day earlier when Barbara Nicklaus sent a text wishing him good luck.

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“I texted her back and said, “You know, we really miss you over here,'” Watson said. “And I really meant it. It’s not the same without Jack playing in the tournament.”

Nicklaus played his final British Open at St. Andrews in 2005 and faded into retirement. But the guy who beat him at Turnberry in ’77 still has a few shots left.

Watson kept the ball in the fairway, rolled in five birdies and bailed himself out the few times he got into trouble, including a testy 6-footer at the final hole to preserve a bogey-free round.

“I think there was some spirituality out there today,” said Watson, whose 65 was matched by Ben Curtis, the surprise winner of the 2003 Open. “Just the serenity of it was pretty neat.”

Tiger Woods didn’t have nearly as much fun. On a day for going low along the Scottish coast – it was mostly sunny with little breeze off the Irish Sea – the world’s No. 1 player struggled to a 71 with one wayward shot after another. He even dunked his ball in Wilson’s Burn, which led to the last of his four bogeys at No. 16.

“I certainly made a few mistakes out there,” Woods said. “Realistically, I probably should have shot about 1- or 2-under par.”

When the round ended, Woods headed back to the range to work on his swing, which looked downright ugly with his right hand flying off the club. His first signs of frustration emerged at No. 3, when he took an angry swipe and mumbled something under his breath. By the time the day was done, he had angrily tossed away his clubs several times.

Six years ago, Curtis was virtually unknown except to family and friends when he won the claret jug on his first try. He missed the cut on his next three attempts, but has finished in the top 10 at the Open the last two years. Now, he’s confident of making a run at another Open championship.

“You don’t win it once and not be able to do it again,” he said. “The last couple of years have been good for me, and this week I got off to a good start.”

Curtis overcame a pair of bogeys with an eagle at the par-5 seventh and birdies on four of his last six holes. He finished with a routine two-putt par at No. 18, walking off tied for the top spot.

Golf’s oldest major keeps bringing out the best in the old-timers. Last year, Greg Norman was 53 when he held the 54-hole lead at Birkdale, only to fade on the final day.

Jimenez is no spring chicken, either, but at age 45 he beat his previous low score in the Open by three strokes and just missed the major championship record. The ponytailed, cigar-puffing Spaniard, known as “the Mechanic,” finished with a flourish, making birdies on the final two holes – including a 66-footer from the edge of the green with his last putt of the day.

There’s still three rounds to go, and the history of major championship golf is filled with opening-day leaders who fell out of contention by the weekend. Watson would be by the far the oldest Open champion, a distinction held by Old Tom Morris (now that’s an appropriate nickname), who was 46 when he won the claret jug for the final time in 1867.

Watson posted his lowest score in the tournament since a second-round 65 in 1994 – the last time it was held at Turnberry. A year ago, he shot 74-76 at Birkdale and missed the cut, but this isn’t the first time he’s come up with some opening-day magic.

At the 2003 U.S. Open, Watson led after the first round at Olympia Fields with ailing Bruce Edwards on the bag. The tears flowed freely after Watson shot a 65; his longtime caddie died less than a year later from Lou Gehrig’s Disease.

This week, Watson has been reminded of a more pleasant experience – his showdown with Nicklaus when the British Open first came to historic Turnberry. Watson held on to win by a stroke on a sun-splashed day in what was essentially a match-play format over the final 18 holes.

“I don’t live in the past,” Watson said. “But certainly that has been at the forefront of a lot of conversations for me this week. A lot of people have been congratulating me for ’77, and they remember it, too. It’s also amazing there’s a lot of kids in the tournament who were not even born in 1977.”

That includes one of Watson’s playing partners, 16-year-old Italian amateur Matteo Manassero, the youngest player in the field. Watson is the oldest.

With red numbers there for the taking, Americans Stewart Cink and Steve Stricker, Australians John Senden and Mathew Goggin, and Camilo Villegas of Colombia put up 66s. Fredrik Jacobson of Sweden and Francesco Molinari of Italy also were at 4 under with several holes to play.

To get old-timer’s theme rolling, 49-year-old Mark Calcavecchia, the 1989 Open champion, went out in the first group of the day with his wife on the bag and shot 67.

He was matched by 52-year-old Mark O’Meara, the ’98 winner who now plays on the Champions Tour, and three-time major champion Vijay Singh, the kid of that group at 46. The group at 67 also included former Masters champion Mike Weir, two-time U.S. Open winner Retief Goosen and down-home American Boo Weekley.

Some of the young guns struggled, most notably 24-year-old Anthony Kim. The emotional leader of America’s winning Ryder Cup team took a 9 at the second hole, hit another ball in the water and struggled with an upper-back injury, requiring treatment on the course.

Don’t forget Padraig Harrington, trying to become the first player since Peter Thomson in 1954-56 to win the Open three years in a row. The Irishman quietly went about his work, tapping in for a 69 that was an improvement on his shaky play this year while he attempts to make changes in his swing.

It wasn’t all fun and games for the senior set.

Norman failed to follow up his stirring performance last year, when he was 18 holes away from becoming the oldest major champion in golf history. The Shark looked every bit his age, now 54, struggling to a 77 that left him likely to miss the cut.


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