The Weekend Post

Drama-filled start for historic event

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AN EMOTIONAL opening shot by Darren Clarke. A shocking one by Rory McIlroy.

Tiger Woods had his worst score to start a British Open. Brooks Koepka quickly got into contention again.

Emiliano Grillo made a 1. David Duval made a 14.

The Open returned to Royal Portrush after a 68-year absence and made up for lost time with an unusual amount of theatre.

When more than 15 hours of golf before a robust, sellout crowd finally ended, JB Holmes was atop the leaderboar­d at a major for the first time in 11 years.

Even that might have been fitting. The big hitter from a small town in Kentucky had his first taste of links golf at Royal Portrush during a college trip, and he recalled how the caddies kept giving him the wrong lines off the tee because they had never seen anyone hit it that far.

Holmes drove the downwind 374-yard fifth hole to 12 CAMERON Smith hopes to find another gear after saving Australia’s blushes in a rugged first round of the British Open at Royal Portrush yesterday.

Smith and Jason Day were four strokes behind American leader JB Holmes, but Adam Scott and Marc Leishman all but shot themselves out of contention with shocking 78s.

“It seemed like one second it was calm and hot and the next second it was cold and windy,” Smith said. feet for a two-putt birdie, and he ended with a 5-iron into the wind to 15 feet for a final birdie and a 5-under 66.

“You just have to accept the conditions over here and not get too greedy,” Holmes said.

He had a one-shot lead over Shane Lowry of Ireland, who didn’t have the level of expectatio­ns or the connection to Royal Portrush like McIlroy, Clarke or native son Graeme

“We had a bit of everything today, but we got through it.”

Jake McLeod (76) also faced an uphill battle to make the halfway cut, while fellow major championsh­ip debutant Dimi Papadatos had no chance of featuring at the weekend following a diabolical 12-over 83. Scott instead floundered in Portrush’s infamous fairway pot bunkers.

“I didn’t really have anything going my way and got myself into some trouble I couldn’t get out of. It’s just disappoint­ing,” he said. McDowell, all of whom grew up in Northern Ireland and never imagined golf’s oldest championsh­ip returning to their tiny country.

“I feel like, for me, I can come here a little more under the radar than the other guys,” Lowry said.

That wasn’t the case for McIlroy.

He was the betting favourite who, as a 16-year-old, stunned Irish golf with a 61 to set the course record at Royal Portrush in the North of Ireland Amateur.

The throaty cheers went silent when his tee shot went left and out of bounds. He went into a bush and had to take a penalty to take it out, and he walked off the first green with a quadruple-bogey 8.

McIlroy finished with a triple bogey for a 79.

“I’m going to go back and see my family, see my friends, and hopefully they don’t think any less of me after a performanc­e like that today,” McIlroy said. “And I’ll dust myself off and come back out tomorrow and try to do better.”

Woods didn’t seem quite as optimistic. He ended with a 78, matching his third-worst score in a major.

“Playing at this elite level is a completely different deal,” Woods said. “You’ve got to be spot on. These guys are too good. There are too many guys that are playing well and I’m just not one of them.”

 ??  ?? ROUGH START: Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy looks for his ball in the long rough on the first hole during the first round of the British Open.
ROUGH START: Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy looks for his ball in the long rough on the first hole during the first round of the British Open.

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