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9:34AM

Newsday (N.Y.): McIlroy leads, Woods in hunt at windless British Open

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -- For a day, Mother Nature, that most fickle of ladies, was as gentle as the heather on the hills. After all, this is Scotland, where the witches in Shakespeare's "Macbeth" conspired in weather as nasty as their reputation, and the forecast for the first round of the 139th British Open was for wind and rain.

Instead, after a light morning drizzle Thursday, golfers shed their waterproofs, their sweaters and their inhibitions. Until early evening, the Old Course at St. Andrews was a charm, and the opening scores were virtually ridiculous.

"It will never get any easier," said Rory McIlroy.

McIlroy shot a 9-under par 63, equaling the lowest Open round ever shot on the game's most historic course, where the tournament is being played for a 28th time. And the "old" Tiger Woods even shot a 5-under 67.

In between were a 65 by Louis Oosthuizen, a South African whose name appears here and there, and 66s by John Daly, Andrew Coltart, Steven Tiley and Bradley Dredge. Among those at 67 was Lucas Glover, who won the 2009 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black, and Lee Westwood, in search of his first major. Phil Mickelson shot a 73.

Linksland courses are defenseless without a brisk wind. For most of the long day - it doesn't get dark here until around 10:30 p.m. - there barely was a breeze. That meant there were a ton of birdies and in the case of the 21-year-old McIlroy, an eagle 2 when he drove the 352-yard par 4 ninth hole.

"You needed to take advantage of conditions," said McIlroy, who like Graeme McDowell, winner of last month's U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, is from Northern Ireland. "It never is going to get any easier."

McIlroy equaled the lowest score ever in a major championship. His 33-30-63 (the eagle, seven birdies and no bogeys) was the 24th time the score was recorded in a major.

"Yeah," said McIlroy "it was a fantastic score."

He said McDowell's U.S. Open victory gave him a belief he could win a major, and then alluding to Padraig Harrington, from the Republic of Ireland, and McDowell, McIlroy quipped, "I wouldn't like to be the only Irishman at the Ryder Cup without a major."

McIlroy's hometown is Holywood, pronounced "Hollywood," But it's too early to be thinking of a cinematic story. "There are 54 holes to go," reminded Tiger.

Woods was pleased with his 67, if not satisfied, dropping a shot at the famed 17th, the Road Hole, and then failing to birdie the 357-yard 18th despite nearly reaching the green with his drive.

"It felt awkward, because there was absolutely no wind whatsoever," said Woods, "and you never play a links golf course with no wind. You knew with the conditions we had, you had to go get it."

Woods won the last two Opens at St. Andrews, in 2000 and 2005, and despite the struggles of his now-familiar marital infidelity and the departure of his swing coach, he looked like a golfer who could justify favoritism by the British bookies.

"It's getting better every week," said Woods of his game. "I'm hitting shots I haven't hit in a long time. It's building.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/mcilroy-leads-woods-in-hunt-at-windless-british-open-1.2108454
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.
9:55AM

Newsday (N.Y.): Tiger reveals new putter, little else, at British Open

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -- They pick at him, but it's hopeless. Tiger Woods' shell is much too hard, his advisers much too heady. There is a change in putters, for the first time in 11 years, but the determination to keep us out of his life remains unchanged.

It's the week of the Open Championship, the 139th, this year at the home of golf, the Old Course at St. Andrews. It's the week Woods returns with his triumphs (winning here in 2000 and 2005) and his troubles.

It's the week the British press gets its chance to dig and confront and ask about infidelity and irresponsibility.

It's the week Tiger gets his chance to prove not only can he lag a putt but he can avoid an accusation.

There were some 20 minutes of Tiger Tuesday, two days before the Open's first round on the Old Course at St. Andrews, and it was educational, if not at all enlightening.

Tiger did say for the first time since 1999 -- and 13 of his 14 majors -- he'll swap his Scotty Cameron by Titleist putter for a Nike model he believes will be more effective on greens slow by championship standards.

And, oh yes, the most important thing in his life is family. The children, that is. Any mention of estranged wife Elin was virtually ignored by Woods.

There's little new to ask Woods, now some nine months after the accident which opened Tiger's life. Divorce? Image? Public support? Tom Watson's (now figuratively ancient) remark Woods needed to clean up his act?

That was essence of the questions, although there was one query about the remaking (and some pros say, the ruination) of the famed Road Hole, the 17th.

"I know they wanted us to hit more club into that particular green,'' said Woods, a response which typified his well-practiced art of saying nothing when he says something.

"I'm pretty neutral on it.''

To the question about Watson's admonishment, Tiger offered more contrition than neutrality. "I'm trying to become a better player,'' he said, "and yes, a better person.''

And to whether he'll ever be able to resurrect his image, Woods added, "I don't know. I don't know. As I said, that's all that really matters. I have two beautiful children, and I'm trying to be the best dad I can possibly be, and that's the most important thing of all.''

The English pro Ian Poulter told The Times of London that Tiger carries in his cell phone a video of his 17-month-old son, Charlie, swinging a cut-down golf club. "You wouldn't believe it,'' said Poulter. "When he's 15, he'll probably have won Augusta by 25 shots.''

The shots the British press fired missed the mark. Asked if the divorce between him and Elin had been finalized -- the papers here say she will receive $100 million -- Woods said, "I'm not going to go into that.''

He did go into the misconceived idea his image would have an impact on his week at St. Andrews.

"It doesn't impact it all,'' he said. "I'm here to play the Open Championship at St. Andrews. I mean this is as good as it gets.''

British journalists, seeking the lurid and juicy, hardly would agree.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/tiger-reveals-new-putter-little-else-at-british-open-1.2102739
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.
9:45AM

RealClearSports: Golf Needs Tiger and Tiger Needs Golf

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -- Peter Dawson, the man from the Royal & Ancient, the organization which rules golf outside the United States, the organization which runs the Open Championship, cut through the posturing and self-righteousness.

Golf, said the R&A's chief executive, isn't golf without Tiger Woods. And whatever we think about Woods' moral standards, about his impending divorce, about his infidelity, the observation is undeniable.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010
9:30AM

SF Examiner: Tiger not letting media mauling ruin his focus

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


ST. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND — He went to Stanford, didn’t he? The Brits should have figured out by now what that means. That even in his most difficult of times, Tiger Woods still is going to battle them, word for word, phrase for phrase, thought for thought.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company
9:41AM

RealClearSports: In Britain, No Sympathy for Tiger

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


LONDON -- This nonsense about where LeBron James signs, in truth, is simply harmless fun. Except to James. And the team that signs him. And the teams that want to sign him -- can anyone say New York? -- and don't.

Over here, they may not know a bounce pass from a bouncer in a pub, but they, meaning the media, meaning we, do know how to go for the jugular.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010