The Daily Telegraph

Johnson endures meltdown on 18th

Battle ahead to make cut after triple bogey for 76 Joint-worst major start for world No 1 with Seve

- By Richard Bath

Carnoustie has a well-deserved reputation for cutting the big boys down to size, and even in the most benign of conditions the list of fallen idols was as long and distinguis­hed as ever. A grand total of 26 major winners teed off in Angus yesterday, and collective­ly they ended the day 67 shots over par.

Thanks to the exemption for those who have already lifted the Claret Jug, that list includes several makeweight­s. Todd Hamilton has about as much hope of adding to his 2004 Open triumph as Robbie Coltrane does of winning Mr Universe. Sixty-year-old Sandy Lyle is in the last year of his exemption. The increasing­ly roly-poly Darren Clarke, who yesterday shot an 11-over round of 82 that could just have easily been 92, looks like he is on one long testimonia­l tour before disappeari­ng off to the Seniors on his 50th birthday next month.

But not all of Carnoustie’s major makeweight­s are yesterday’s men. One who was widely expected to make an impression this week was Dustin Johnson, the world No 1.

Instead, the 34-year-old ended his first round with a triple bogey for a five-over round of 76, equalling the worst opening round in a major for a world No1, which came when Seve Ballestero­s imploded at Troon in 1986. Once again, Johnson’s putting was his Achilles’ heel. “Just a month ago at the US Open, I played well enough to win but I didn’t putt well enough to win,” he said. “I didn’t feel like I was hitting bad putts, but I just wasn’t making anything. That’s golf.”

Actually, that is Johnson’s golf, or at least his golf at majors. Yesterday he took 33 putts in his opening round, in the process bogeying the eighth, 12th and 16th, before ending his round with a horror-show triple bogey at the par-four 18th. It will be cold comfort for the American that the final hole was the scene of a succession of car-crash finishes, with numerous double bogeys, four triple bogeys and a quadruple bogey for Belgium’s Nicolas Colsaerts, a rare sighting of a snowman at a major.

At times, Johnson’s huge length off the tee was problemati­c. On the 410-yard seventh, for instance, he crashed a monstrous drive to within a few feet of the greenside bunker, leaving himself a difficult pitch to a pin tucked in behind the trap.

At other times his driving was so sublime that he was in the perfect position to ease himself into contention. On the 415-yard fourth his drive was so long that he was able to putt his second, only to leave it so short that he had to settle for a par.

He missed a birdie by a couple of inches on the first, then repeated the feat on the second. His luck gave out on the par-three eighth, when a curiously lethargic quarterswi­ng landed him in the bunker and he failed to get up and down.

As playing partners Alex Noren and Charley Hoffman made a succession of birdie putts only to then bogey holes, DJ was down on his putting luck, except at the 14th where he registered his sole birdie of the round before almost immediatel­y cancelling it out with a bogey at 16.

And then came the meltdown at the last. Johnson has long made a habit of chucking in a nightmaris­h hole at an inopportun­e moment, with his quadruple bogey at the PGA in 2015 the most spectacula­r – but this one was right up there.

It is a long way back for him to make the cut, far less challenge for his second major.

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