Haas, Sluman battle cold to take Senior PGA lead


Greg Norman shot 72 in a rare tour appearance.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — Jay Haas made a crack about everyone being bundled up. Jeff Sluman kidded around, too, saying he bounced a shot off a snowbank.

On a day better suited for snowmen than birdies, the two veterans could laugh after braving wet, bone-chilling and eventually windy conditions to find themselves atop the leaderboard after the first round of the Senior PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club Thursday.

“It was pretty miserable this morning, everybody’s got long johns on and ski caps and wind-breakers,” Haas said.

But at least Haas’ day was over following a 1-under 69 that held up as the day’s best, one shot better than Sluman, the local favorite, and New Jersey golf pro Bill Britton.

And there was the additional consolation for Haas, who noted he was heading straight to his warm hotel room to watch everyone else deal with the elements.

“I’m under the covers, maybe, I’ll be happy about that,” said Haas, attempting to win his second Senior PGA in three years.

There’s a group of nine, including Bernhard Langer, Scott Hoch and Ian Woosnam, two shots off the lead at 71.

Greg Norman, setting aside his many business ventures to make a rare competitive appearance, shot 72 in only his fourth tournament this year to sit in a nine-way tie in a group that includes defending Senior PGA champion Denis Watson.

The hands-down, first-round winner was Oak Hill’s East Course, which lived up to its stingy reputation with help from the elements once the $2 million tournament got under way. The course gave up only one eagle when Britton carded a 2 on the par 4 No. 16.

Haas was part of the morning groups that faced a light drizzle and temperatures in the low 40s. Things didn’t improve much by noon, when temperatures shot into the relatively balmy 50s. Trouble was, once the sun poked through the gray clouds, the winds also followed, gusting above 20-mph to create additional havoc on the narrow fairways.

“Well, I survived. And that’s what it is, a survival test,” said Tim Simpson, who flirted with the lead before carding a 71 in the afternoon.

Sluman summed up the day when he recounted how he opened his round with a bogey: “Three-wood on 1 off the snow and into the left trees.”