The Scotsman

On the march/ Fowler shoots 65 at US Open

● American excels on the longest course in major history but Johnson toils to 75

- By PHIL CASEY at Erin Hills

Rickie Fowler made a record-equalling start to the US Open last night but immediatel­y declared: “I’d rather be remembered for something that’s done on Sunday.”

Fowler carded seven birdies in a flawless opening 65 at Erin Hills in Wisconsin, which equalled the lowest score in relation to par in the first round of a US Open.

Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf both shot 63 in the first round on the par-70 layout at Baltusrol in New Jersey in 1980.

Fowler, who finished in the top five in all four majors in 2014, has yet to win one of the game’s biggest prizes.

Rickie Fowler made light of the longest course in major championsh­ip history to produce a record-equalling start to the US Open yesterday.

Erin Hills had been set up to play to 7,845 yards in the first round, surpassing the record set at Chambers Bay in 2015 by 150 yards, but a combinatio­n of wide fairways and a course softened by thundersto­rms earlier in the week helped Fowler card seven birdies in a flawless opening 65.

That equalled the lowest score in relation to par in the first round of a US Open, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf having both shot 63 in the first round on the par-70 layout at Baltusrol in 1980.

“I’d rather be remembered for something that’s done on Sunday,” said Fowler, who finished in the top five in all four majors in 2014 but has yet to win one of the game’s biggest prizes.

“I didn’t see seven under at the start of the week, but today is the best we are going to get. I just kept making putts when it mattered. It was nice. You don’t get many rounds at the US Open that are stress-free.

“I knew I needed to drive it well and from there was just able to manage hitting and continuing to swing well and hitting good shots and rolling a couple in.” Fowler, who was 25 over par for his previous four rounds in the US Open, started from the tenth and birdied the 11th, 12th, 14th and 18th to reach the turn in 32, before picking up further shots on the first, second and seventh.

That left the 28-year-old two shots clear of compatriot­s Brian Harman and Brooks Koepka and England’s Tommy Fleetwood, with Ryder Cup star Patrick Reed on four under.

Lee Westwood, who is seeking his first major title at the 77th attempt, was a shot further back, but defending champion and world No 1 Dustin Johnson struggled to a three-over-par 75. Martin Laird carded a level-par 72, while fellow Scot Russell Knox shot a 73 to sit in a group which included 2015 champion Jordan Spieth.

Fleetwood had missed the cut in his last two starts, but the 26-year-old from Southport made an ideal start with a birdie on his opening hole and added four more in a brilliant putting display.

“The course was as receptive as it’s going to be but I never really tried to make a birdie, they just seemed to happen along the way,” said Fleetwood. “But towards the end I holed some great putts for par. No matter how fast you start or how many birdies you make the pars are the ones that keep you in it.”

Johnson carded a double bogey, two bogeys and a solitary birdie in his 75 to lie ten shots off the pace. Johnson only arrived at Erin Hills on Tuesday afternoon after fiancee Paulina Gretzky gave birth to the couple’s second son – named River Jones Johnson – on Monday, but had insisted his previous practice at the venue meant he was not “behind the eightball.”

The day had started with confirmati­on that Phil Mickelson, pictured, would miss the

0 Rickie Fowler lines up a putt on the ninth green as he played his way to the top of the leaderboar­d.

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