Upstart leads, but Tiger lurks at U.S. Open
June 15, 2012 - 1:07 am
SAN FRANCISCO - The U.S. Open featured two marquee groups but only one marquee player.
Take Tiger Woods out of the equation, and the world's top five players were no match for unforgiving Olympic Club.
Then again, not many were.
The lead belonged to Michael Thompson, a 27-year-old in his first U.S. Open as a pro. He made seven birdies - that's seven more than Luke Donald - for a 4-under-par 66 that gave him a three-shot lead over Woods and the four other lucky souls who broke par Thursday.
The buzz came from Woods.
Even as Thompson strung together four birdies on the back nine, Woods put on a clinic on the other side of the course on how to handle golf's toughest test.
Woods never was out of position. None of his tee shots found the deep, nasty rough lining the fairways. He showed hardly any stress in the most demanding of majors. With consecutive birdies late in his round, including a 35-foot putt that banged into the back of the cup, Woods opened with a 1-under 69 to raise hopes that he can end that four-year drought in the majors.
"I felt like I had control of my game all day," Woods said. "Just stuck to my game plan - and executed my game plan."
For so many others, the game plan was to survive. Thirteen players shot in the 80s, and the average score was 74.9
The best tribute to Olympic's toughness was the showing of the world's top five players. They combined to go 26 over par, which includes Woods at 69. Perhaps it was Ryo Ishikawa who best summed up the day after a hard-earned 71: "I'm very tired right now."
Woods stood out on a day when the game's best struggled mightily.
He was in the marquee group in the morning with four-time major champion Phil Mickelson and Masters champion Bubba Watson. Mickelson never found his opening tee that he hooked into the trees and shot 76. Watson said Olympic "beat me up" on his way to a 78.
In the afternoon, the USGA put together Nos. 1-2-3 based on their world ranking, and it was a rank performance.
Donald failed to make a birdie in his round of 79. Rory McIlroy, the defending champion, bogeyed three of his last four holes for a 77 and then declined interview requests, instead speaking to a pool reporter. Lee Westwood was 4 over through six holes and made an impressive rally for a 73.
The top three in the world ranking combined for three birdies.
"It shows how tough it is," Donald said. "There aren't that many opportunities out there."
Only six players broke par in the opening round, which would have come as a surprise to none of the players. After opening with a birdie, Joe Ogilvie turned to his caddie and said, "Seventy-one more pars and we're hoisting the trophy." He shot 73.
Woods and David Toms opened with 69 in the morning, with overcast conditions from a marine layer off the Pacific Ocean.
Graeme McDowell, who won the U.S. Open two years ago down the coast at Pebble Beach, Justin Rose and Nick Watney each had 69 in the afternoon. Watney would not be in that group except for the rarest shot in golf - with a 5-iron from 190 yards, the ball well below his feet on the canted fairway, he made an albatross 2 on the par-5 17th that saved his day.
McIlroy said he simply got out of position. What didn't need to be said by anyone was that Olympic Club is a far different test from Congressional, where the 23-year-old shattered the U.S. Open scoring record at 16-under 268.
The good news for McIlroy? His record is safe here.
"Anything just a little off and it really punishes you," McIlroy said. "You have to be precise with your tee shots and your iron shots and leave it on the right side of the pins, and today I didn't really do any of that."
Toms relied on a superb short game and an even better attitude.
"You really just have to concentrate, give it your all on every shot and never give in to the golf course, because it will punish you if your attitude is not good, if your concentration is not good," Toms said. "There's just too many hard shots out there to really ever give in to it and not be there."
The group at 70 included Jim Furyk, Matt Kuchar and 17-year-old Beau Hossler, playing in his second U.S. Open.
Thompson's game seems to work on this quirky, tree-lined course built on the side of a giant dune that separates the Pacific Ocean from Lake Merced.
He was runner-up in the 2007 U.S. Amateur at Olympic Club and couldn't wait to get back.
After a roller coaster of a front nine that featured consecutive bogeys and holing a bunker shot for birdie on the downhill par-3 third hole, Thompson hit his stride on the back nine, even if hardly anyone was watching.
He made five consecutive 3s - three of them birdies - and closed his dream round with a 10-foot birdie putt on the short, tough 18th for the lead. Thompson took only 22 putts.
"On the back side, the putter ... seems like every putt went in the hole," Thompson said. "Got a little nervous there once all those cameras showed up. It's always a little bit of an adjustment. In that sense, I kind of wish I was Phil or Tiger, because you get the cameras from the beginning."
There weren't enough cameras or fans to find Mickelson's opening tee shot, but it was easy to find Woods.
He missed only four fairways - three of them that ran off the severe slopes and into the first cut, the other into a bunker on the 256-yard seventh hole, which is where he was aiming. The only glitch was failing to get the ball closer to the hole with short irons, including the 14th when it landed on the back of the green and bounced off the base of the grandstand.
That led to one of his two bogeys, the other at No. 6 with a poor bunker shot. The only surprise was a good one - the 35-foot birdie putt on the fifth that he struck too hard and worried it might lead to a three-putt until the hole got in the way.
"Five was a fluke," Woods said. "That putt was off the green."
TV: 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., ESPN (30); noon, NBC (3)
First Round
• Michael Thompson 34-32-66
• Tiger Woods 33-36-69
• David Toms 33-36-69
• Nick Watney 34-35-69
• Justin Rose 35-34-69
• Graeme McDowell 34-35-69
• a-Beau Hossler 35-35-70
• Jason Bohn 32-38-70
• Jae-Bum Park 36-34-70
• Robert Karlsson 35-35-70
• Alistair Presnell 34-36-70
• Matt Kuchar 34-36-70
• Ian Poulter 33-37-70
• Jim Furyk 33-37-70
Other Notables
• Phil Mickelson 37-39-76
• Rory McIlroy 38-39-77
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