The Hamilton Spectator

SHARE OF LEAD

- DOUG FERGUSON

SOUTHAMPTO­N, N.Y. — The return to a classic U.S. Open course brought back the kind of scoring that gave this major its reputation.

Dustin Johnson played some of his best golf Thursday and yet the world’s No. 1 player barely beat par in the treacherou­s wind at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club on Long Island. Johnson holed a bunker shot for birdie, kept his mistakes to a minimum and joined Ian Poulter, Scott Piercy and Russell Henley at 1-under 69 for a share of the lead.

“You had to focus on every single shot you hit — putts, everything,” Johnson said. “It was just difficult all day.”

No need to tell that to Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth and a long list of golf ’s bests who had their hopes crushed in gusts that approached more than 35 km/h.

In his return to the U.S. Open after a two-year absence, Woods opened a major with a triple bogey for the first time in 15 years. He added back-to-back double bogeys on the back nine and staggered to a 78.

Spieth waited until the second hole to make a triple bogey, blasted out of a bunker and over the 11th green, and then took three shots to get on the putting surface. McIlroy found trouble just about everywhere and shot 80, his highest first-round score in a major.

“It was pretty evident nobody was making any birdies in the morning — lots and lots of bogeys and ‘others,’ ” Woods said. “My game plan was not to make any ‘others,’ and I made three of them. So didn’t do very well there.”

It was quite a contrast from last year at Erin Hills Golf Course in Wisconsin, which set a record for the first round by yielding 44 rounds under par.

Piercy, the last man in the 156man field as an alternate from qualifying, was so disgusted with his game in his final practice round that he walked off the course.

He dropped only two shots, both on par 3s, and was the first to post a 69. Poulter also played in the morning, while Johnson and Henley played in the afternoon as the wind reached its full strength.

Henley was the only player to reach 3 under at any point, and he promptly gave that back with a double bogey on No. 10.

Jason Dufner opened with a 70, and even those at 1-over 71 felt as though they put in a hard day’s work, a group that included Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson.

“It’s a different kind of enjoyment, right?” Rose said.

“I enjoy the battle. I enjoy the fight. I enjoy the grind, really. When you get a bit cut up and bruised, it can change pretty quick.”

Johnson is coming off a sixshot victory last week in the St. Jude Classic, and while no one has ever won the U.S. Open coming off a PGA Tour victory the week before, he played as though nothing had changed.

He holed medium-length putts for birdies, a few nervy, short putts for par and picked up a bonus when his shot from a front bunker on the par-4 eighth rattled and rolled into the cup.

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 ?? SETH WENIG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tiger Woods, left, and Dustin Johnson line up their putts on the 16th green during the first round of the U.S. Open on Thursday in Southampto­n, N.Y. The tough course was made even tougher by gusty winds.
SETH WENIG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tiger Woods, left, and Dustin Johnson line up their putts on the 16th green during the first round of the U.S. Open on Thursday in Southampto­n, N.Y. The tough course was made even tougher by gusty winds.
 ?? ROB CARR GETTY IMAGES ?? Jordan Spieth of the United States reacts to a missed putt on the 16th green.
ROB CARR GETTY IMAGES Jordan Spieth of the United States reacts to a missed putt on the 16th green.

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