Watson turns back years with a 65

July 17, 2009, 7:19pm

TURNBERRY, Scotland (Reuters) — Tom Watson, the oldest player in the field, spectacularly rolled back the years with an inspired display commanding the spotlight at the British Open on Thursday.

Taking advantage of ideal scoring conditions on the Ailsa Course, the 59-year-old fired a flawless five-under-par 65 to end the opening round a stroke behind pacesetting Spaniard Miguel Angel Jimenez.

While triple champion and heavy favorite Tiger Woods struggled to a 71, Watson produced the ball-striking and links-course creativity that helped him lift the prized Claret Jug on five occasions.

He covered the back nine in three-under 32 to finish level with fellow American Ben Curtis, the 2003 champion, and Japan's Kenichi Kuboya who ended his round with an explosive birdie-birdie-eagle-birdie run.

“She was defenseless today,” Watson told reporters of the coastal layout. “The golf course played with no wind and it was an easy test, if you have an easy test in an Open championship.”

Thirty-two years ago, Watson outduelled Jack Nicklaus to win the first Open staged at Turnberry. On Wednesday, he received a timely good-luck text message from Nicklaus' wife Barbara.

Asked to explain why some of the older hands had flourished on Thursday, Watson replied: ''We have an advantage.

The pros don't play links golf except in the Open championships or the Senior Open championships. We've played under these conditions and we kind of get a feel for it and that feel is worth its weight in gold when you're playing.”

The pony-tailed Jimenez, a 15-time winner on the European Tour, stole Watson's thunder late in the day with a birdie-birdie finish capping a bogey-free 64.

“If I remember right, this was my best start in a major,” the 45-year-old Spaniard said as he smoked a celebratory cigar after draining a 60-foot putt on the 18th green.

Asked if he felt any guilt after dislodging Watson from the top of the leaderboard, Jimenez replied: ''No, he's going to be a legend forever. Tom Watson is one of the guys you still have to look at, keep looking for."

“We have to feel very proud to play with him, still playing at the level he plays.”

Curtis, shock Open champion at Royal St. George's in 2003 when he began the tournament as a 300-1 outsider, surged up the leaderboard with an eagle, five birdies and two bogeys.

Australian John Senden, a late addition to the field after the withdrawal of Indian Jeev Milkha Singh on Tuesday due to a rib injury, birdied four of the last six holes for a 66.

The scores:
64 — Miguel Angel Jimenez

65 — Tom Watson, Ben Curtis, Kenichi Kuboya

66 — John Senden, Steve Stricker, Camilo Villegas, Stewart Cink, Mathew Goggin

67 — Mark Calcavecchia, Mark O'Meara, Vijay Singh, Boo Weekley, Branden Grace, Steve Marino, Mike Weir, Retief Goosen, Jim Furyk, James Kingston, Richard Sterne

68 — Anthony Wall, Graeme McDowell, Sean O'Hair, Anders Hansen, Lee Westwood, Ryo Ishikawa, David Howell, DJ Trahan, Soren Kjeldsen, Andres Romero, Soren Hansen, JB Holmes, Paul Casey, John Daly, Tom Lehman, Terry Pilkadaris

69 — Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Thongchai Jaidee, Billy Mayfair, Ross Fisher (Britain), Ernie Els, Martin Kaymer, Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy, Angel Cabrera , Padraig Harrington, Davis Love III, Kevin Sutherland, David Drysdale, Steve Surry

70 — Paul Broadhurst, Jeff Overton, Nick Dougherty, Sergio Garcia, Peter Hanson, Louis Oosthuizen, Robert Allenby, Justin Leonard, Chris Wood, Bryce Molder, Matt Kuchar, Zach Johnson, Fredrik Jacobson, Richard S Johnson, Josh Geary (New Zealand), Elliot Saltman, David Smail

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