
The Associated Press | Posted: Thursday, July 24, 2008 11:00 pm
OAKVILLE, Ontario -- Mike Weir gave Canadian Open fans what they came to see on another rainy day at drenched Glen Abbey.
The Canadian icon shot a bogey-free 6-under 65 on Thursday for a share of the lead with Anthony Kim and Eric Axley during the suspended first round. Only half of the players were able to finish the round that was delayed for 5 hours, 42 minutes.
"You want to take advantage of today because it's only going to get a little firmer and faster," said Weir, his words punctuated by a clap of thunder that drew a smile and forced him to reconsider his answer. "Maybe not with what's coming. Maybe not."
Richard Johnson, J.P. Hayes, Nicholas Thompson, Ryan Armour and Jason Allred shot 67s on the course saturated by 8 inches of rain in six days. John Senden and Charley Hoffman also were 4 under. Senden played nine holes, and Hoffman completed eight.
Because of the wet conditions, players were allowed to use preferred lies.
"We're playing lift, clean and place and, if you hit fairways, you're going to have great opportunities to go at flags," Kim said. "The course isn't overly long. But if you can hit some 7-irons 15 feet and shake some of those in, you'll be in good shape. I hit every fairway and that gave me a lot of opportunities to go at some pins."
Two-time defending champion Jim Furyk, a few minutes away from teeing off when play was suspended because of lightning a little before 1 p.m., was 1-under at the turn.
A brief storm hit at about 1:30 p.m. and waves of showers followed, flooding bunkers and fairways on the course that many players thought would be unplayable after heavy rain Wednesday. Play resumed at about 6:30 p.m., and was suspended because of darkness at 8:49 p.m., leaving the course once again to the weary maintenance crew.
"I heard in the locker room somebody said they were here until 3 in the morning," Weir said. "I'm sure they got a couple hours of sleep and were right back at it first thing. They've had their work cut out and they've done a great job. It exceeded my expectations what I thought I was going to see out there."
Weir's 65, highlighted by 11 one-putt greens, matched his best score in the tournament and was his first opening sub-70 round of the year. He finished with a 5-foot birdie putt on the par-4 ninth, drawing one last round of cheers from the adoring fans who lined the fairways 10 deep in places.
"It played probably about as easy as Glen Abbey can play given the ball's not running out through the fairways on some of the doglegs," Weir said. "You just kind of hit it to the corner and it's just stopping there. ... With the greens being soft, you can fly the ball right to the hole and it would stop."
Trying to become the first Canadian winner since Pat Fletcher in 1954, Weir is back at Glen Abbey for the first time since a playoff loss to Vijay Singh in 2004. The 2003 Masters champion is making his 18th appearance in the event. He missed the cut in his first nine starts -- eight at Glen Abbey and one at Royal Montreal.
"I did need to get over the struggles I had around here," Weir said. "Finally shooting some good rounds in 2004 helped me get over the mental hurdle that I can shoot better than 70 out here."
• LPGA Evian Masters: At Evian-Les-Bains, France, Lorena Ochoa, a six-time winner on the LPGA Tour this year who took off the last three weeks, shot a 7-under 65 and held a one-stroke lead after the first round of the Evian Masters. Ahn Sun-ju, Candie Kung and Angela Park trailed by one stroke.
• Senior British Open: At Troon, Scotland, four days after nearly making history at the British Open, Greg Norman labored to a 4-over 75 in the opening round of the Seniors British Open to finish seven shots behind co-leaders Bruce Vaughan and Eduardo Romero.
In sunny conditions at Troon, Norman bogeyed six of the first 10 holes and was 6 over before he finally birdied the par-4 13th. He birdied the final hole with a pitch to 3 feet.
While Norman struggled, playing partner Tom Watson made every green and missed only one fairway in a bogey-free 70. Andy Bean, John Cook and Kirk Hanefield and Nick Job were one shot off the leaders.
Vaughan made eight birdies for a 3-under 68 on the links course. But his round was hampered by a double-bogey and a triple. He recovered from the 7s on the sixth and 12th holes to play the last six at 3-under par.