Wind was all it took to 'Tigerize' Augusta
By RON SIRAK / AP Golf Writer
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- Perhaps Tiger Woods and the other young
bombers will make Augusta National obsolete someday. Thursday's
first round of the Masters was not that day.
When Woods walked away from here last year with a green jacket
on his back and a record 18-under par on his scorecard, the cry
went up from some to "Tigerize" Augusta.
Make it longer. Grow rough. Move the bunkers back.
But all it took to reveal the devilishly deceiving design of
the grand old course planned by Bobby Jones 65 years ago was an
unnerving wind and some wicked greens.
Fifty-six of the 88 players had finished the first round before
Fred Couples was finally able to post a score below 70, rolling
in a 6-foot par saver on No. 18 for a 69, a lead that held up.
Woods, trying to become only the third man to win consecutive
Masters, played the par-5 holes 13-under par last year and dominated
them again in the first round, making two-putt birdies on Nos.
2, 8 and 13 as he shot a 71, two strokes behind Couples.
But as much as he overpowered the course last year, this time
Woods hung in there with one gutsy par save after another. He
hit every fairway but his iron game was off. Ten times he missed
the green and had to scramble to save par. Seven times he was
successful.
With gusts that topped 30 mph, bent flagsticks and whipped
sand from the bunkers in a blinding swirl, the best players in
the world were forced to use everything in their bags, from spin
shots to knockdowns to bump-and-runs.
"What you had to do was invent shots all day long,"
said Jack Nicklaus, who was playing in his 40th Masters, has a
record six green jackets and shot a 73.
And they were forced to make a ton of putts, many merely to
save par.
This was not a day to attack Augusta National.
"If it had not rained, I don't think anyone would have
broken par," Couples said about the 2-inch downpour overnight
that delayed the start of play by 90 minutes so the bunkers could
be drained and greens dried.
Couples said the course played "probably a 9, maybe an
8-1/2" on a scale of 1 to 10.
Paul Stankowski, a Texan used to playing in the wind; 1994
Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal, a Spaniard who plays in
the wind of the European Tour; and Scott Hoch, a great ballstriker,
got to 2-under-par 70.
"I used to say in college the wind is my friend,"
said Stankowski, who went to Texas-El Paso. "But here at
Augusta, it's a real challenge."
Colin Montgomerie, Paul Azinger, Phil Blackmar, Fuzzy Zoeller
and Woods were the only other players to break par, getting in
with 71s.
If no one among the 10 players still on the course when play
was suspended by darkness gets in at 70 or lower, Woods and Zoeller
-- who crossed paths after last year's Masters when Zoeller made
racial jokes about Woods -- would be paired in Friday's second
round.
The wind on Thursday gusted so hard it even affected putting.
"It was blowing as hard today as possibly any wind I've
played in," Blackmar said. "Thank goodness the course
is surrounded by trees. If we had been on an exposed course, the
wind would have blown the ball off the greens."
Azinger made a birdie on the second hole, then ran off 16 consecutive
pars as the only player to make it through 18 holes without a
bogey.
Disasters were all over the scoreboard. Ben Crenshaw shot an
83. Tom Watson had a 78 and John Daly was at 77. Greg Norman,
Jim Furyk, Billy Mayfair and Lee Janzen were at 76. Costantino
Rocca, who made a 10 on the 15th hole, shot an 81.
PGA Championship winner Davis Love III was at 74 along with
British Open winner Justin Leonard.
U.S. Open champion Ernie Els, Nick Faldo and David Duval were
still on the course when play was suspended.
Among the surprising successes were 66-year-old Gay Brewer,
who became the oldest person in the 62 Masters to shoot par or
better with a 72.
Also surprising -- and impressive -- was the way Woods had
to struggle to shoot a 71.
Woods missed the green at Nos. 1, 3, 4 and 6, but managed to
save par three of the four times. When he rolled in a 15-foot
birdie putt on No. 9, he was tied for the lead at 2-under par.
But he missed the first three greens on the back nine and was
not able to save par on the 11th and 12th hole, slamming his club
to the ground after the latter bogey. He got a stroke back with
the birdie on No. 13.
He rolled in 3-foot par putt on No. 14, a 15-footer to save
par on No. 16 and chipped to 2 feet to save par on the final hole.
Couples, who won here in 1992, made birdies on the first three
holes, made bogeys on the extremely difficult par-3 holes at Nos.
4 and 6, then closed the front nine with two birdies on the final
three holes.
He made another bogey on No. 12 when he played is second shot
from edge of water with his bare right foot in the water and chipped
to 6 feet but missed the putt.
Perhaps the biggest surprise of the day was Zoeller, who has
not won on the PGA Tour since 1986. He birdied the par-5 8th hole
to get to two under par then made nine consecutive pars before
making a bogey on the last hole to finish with a 71.
"It was fun to play the old course today," Zoeller
said. "She had her teeth out."
Zoeller, who may end up being bettered remembered for the jokes
he made about Woods than for winning the Masters in 1979, was
carried along by waves of cheers everywhere he went.
When he crossed the Sarazen Bridge to the 15th green, the hundreds
of people jammed into the bleachers on the left side of the hole
rose to their feet and gave him a long standing ovation and shouted
words of support.
"There's a long way to go," Zoeller said when asked
how it would feel to get a second green jacket. "The tournament
doesn't start until Sunday, you know."
Last year the tournament was over by Sunday. Woods was so overwhelming
he was ahead by nine strokes starting the final round and went
on to win by 12.
This year, it seems, nature may keep that from happening.
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