Bruce Vaughan leads US Seniors


Associated Press

SAMMAMISH, Wash.

The fans following Fred Couples and Tom Watson early Thursday morning were sometimes six- and seven-deep, wedging themselves between tree trunks and ducking under limbs.

Very quietly, and without much attention, Bruce Vaughan was the player taking early control of the U.S. Senior Open.

Taking advantage of cool morning conditions and mostly avoiding the canopy of trees engulfing Sahalee Country Club, Vaughan opened with a 4-under 66 on Thursday to take a two-stroke lead.

The 2008 Senior British Open champion — his only victory on the Champions Tour — made just two bogeys in a steady round, while favorites such as Couples and Watson were far more shaky.

“It’s just the first day. I mean, there is a lot of golf left and a lot of trouble out there for the next three days,” Vaughan said.

Trouble seemed to be the story of the day.

Whether it was the firm greens sending irons from the fairway hoping 2 feet in the air, or the sprawling limbs in the sea of cedar, fir and pine trees gobbling up wayward shots, the U.S. Golf Association made certain Sahalee was no easy hike through the woods.

About the only favorable bounce went to Mark Calcavecchia, who glanced his side-hill second shot on No. 18 off a green side tree. Instead of bouncing into trouble, Calcavecchia’s ball stopped just short of the green, and he rolled it up to the front pin for birdie.

Otherwise, Sahalee was unrelenting.

“It seems like the top 100 players in the world were here, rather than a 156 old guys,” Calcavecchia said after his 69. “This is probably the hardest pin placements I’ve seen in years. It was tough.”

Couples, the hometown favorite playing 20 miles from where he grew up, nearly saw his round unravel when a blocked tee shot on No. 1 — his 10th hole — plugged in a fern bush at the base of two cedars. After taking an unplayable lie, Couples managed bogey, but made another two holes later to fall to 3 over.

Then came Couples’ one run. The 50-year-old, playing in his first U.S. Senior Open, strung together three straight birdies to salvage an even-par round of 70.

“I think the score I shot is phenomenal,” Couples said. “I would have taken 70 before the round started. ... I was very, very mediocre.”