Golf: Adam Scott set the pace with a course record-equalling 64 while a steely-looking Tiger Woods rattled off four early birdies in a composed first-round 67 in the early stages of the British Open today. Scott conjured up eight birdies in benign conditions at Lytham to finish on six under par, one ahead of Paul Lawrie and Zach Johnson.
Former world number one Woods played beautifully controlled golf to birdie the first, fourth, sixth and seventh holes, getting his bid for a 15th major championship, and first for four years, off to a flawless start. He wasted further birdie opportunities before twice finding treacherous rough at the 15th hole and dropping his only shot of the day.
Scott made a steady start to his round but he found inspiration around the turn with five birdies in eight holes.Three more in a row from the 14th put him in sight of a major championship record-tying 63 but he found the rough at the last and dropped a shot.
"The calm conditions today were surprising," he said. "It was very pleasing to start off with a solid round because that's what I haven't done at the other majors this year. The goal today was to play it like a Sunday - and there was no tomorrow."
Johnson, US Masters champion in 2007, made seven birdies but bogeyed the 17th and had to settle for a 65 Lawrie, the 1999 Open winner, made three successive birdies from the third and picked up further shots at the 14th and 15th to set him up for a final flourish when a sumptuous iron into the 18th green left him with a tap-in for birdie.
Rory McIlroy recovered from a double bogey on the 15th hole to shoot a three under par 67. It could have been so much better for the Ulsterman had he not driven out of bounds and clobbered a spectator on the head in that eventful passage.
It was a costly error but McIlroy immediately bounced back and drove the green on the 336 yard 16th hole. His eagle putt fell just short but the birdie at least gave him one shot back instantly.
A wedge to 10 feet on the 18th had the crowd off their seats with McIlroy closing his round very much in the hunt and three shots off Scott’s 64.
Padraig Harrington fought to stay at level par. Two birdies and three bogeys in the front nine took him out in 35. Although the Dubliner worked hard throughout the round, it just wasn’t happening. He opened the back nine with a birdie, bogeyed the 17th par 4 and closed with a birdie on the 18th for 70 and six shots off the pace.
Former US Open champion Graeme McDowell, inches away from a hole-in-one at the ninth, completed a solid 67, level with Woods, South African Ernie Els, Open champion in 2002, and US Masters winner Bubba Watson.
Woods calmly birdied the par-three first, picked up another shot with a snaking 20-foot effort on the fourth and pinpoint approaches at the sixth and seventh set up further birdie chances which he converted with immaculate putts.
Stalking the course with unwavering concentration, he looked completely at ease until an errant drive at the 15th left his ball buried in deep rough. After hacking out awkwardly into another patch of lush deep grass, Woods then produced a brilliant recovery shot to find the green and he narrowly missed a 20-foot putt for par.
Lee Westwood birdied the opening two holes but the Englishman, wearing the red cross of St George on his gleaming white shoes, then double-bogeyed the third and he faded badly to finish with a scrappy 73. Defending champion Darren Clarke also made a poor start with a bogey-strewn 76.