107th U.S. Open First Round News and Notes

Golf Betting Lines

06/15/2007 - Oakmont, PA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Phil Mickelson wore a black brace on his injured left wrist Thursday during the first round of the U.S. Open. He took it off to putt, revealing a bandage underneath.

Mickelson opened with a four-over 74 at Oakmont and was six shots off Nick Dougherty's lead.

"I feel like I hung in there, and I'm excited to still be in it," he said.

Questions about the condition of Mickelson's wrist diverted talk, at least for a day, from his collapse at the 72nd hole at Winged Foot last year. The injury forced his withdrawal two weeks ago from the Memorial and caused him to miss a scheduled start last week in Memphis.

But the wrist looked OK as Mickelson blasted out to within inches from a bunker on the back nine, and he appeared comfortable making putts like the 12- footer he rolled in for par at his 16th hole (No. 7).

"I'm not overly disappointed," he said. "It could have been a round that got away from me."

Mickelson said he may have injured the wrist while chipping from the long rough at Oakmont during a practice round ahead of the Memorial. He was back Thursday, and the rough was just as penal.

Not exactly the place you want to test out an injured wrist.

"This isn't the course you want to do that," Mickelson said. "[The wrist] got a little bit more sore, but I was able to trust that it was okay."

OAKMONT PLAYING EASY?

Not really.

Playing in an early morning tee time, Dougherty made four birdies and two bogeys to take the lead, then said Oakmont was playing "easy." Not that he wanted everyone to know he said that.

"I hate saying it ... Especially if a USGA official picks up on that," he added. "It's still frightfully tough out there."

The scoring average was 75.32, down from 75.98 in the first round at Winged Foot last year but still almost six shots over par, meaning even the players who shot 75 and 76 were right in the middle of the pack.

The only hole that played under-par was the 609-yard, par-five fourth, which played to a 4.974 average. The toughest hole was the par-four 18th, which played to an average of 4.654 shots.

There were 17 scores in the 80s and just two in the 60s (Dougherty's 68 and Angel Cabrera's 69).

Statistically, the first round at this year's Masters was tougher with a 76.188 average.

OPEN NOTES

- A funny thing happened to Tom Byrum at the par-four ninth: He holed out from the fairway ... into the wrong hole. Turns out the No. 9 green is big enough to also serve as the practice green for the championship, and Byrum found one of those holes. Get used to seeing players back there this weekend, but don't get used to seeing players hole out. Even into the wrong cup.

- Defending champion Geoff Ogilvy opened with a one-over 71 and was tied with a large group that included Tiger Woods, Jim Furyk and Vijay Singh. He also opened with a 71 last year at Winged Foot.

- If Ogilvy has hopes of repeating, history isn't exactly on his side. The last player to successfully defend his U.S. Open title was Curtis Strange in 1989.

- There were two eagles posted in the morning wave of tee times -- by Stuart Appleby and Michael Block -- and none by the players who teed off in the afternoon.

- Rhys Davies and John Kelly shared low amateur honors for the first round with four-over 74s.

- There are players from 20 countries and 27 U.S. states competing this week.

Wwwezscores Golf Betting News


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