Page 16-Friday, July 18, 1980-The Michigan Daily .w ; or se 0 f V ! ! .' :. JANSON, DINGMAN SECOND Groves grabs early lead in Open By DREW SHARP Steve Groves battled surprisingly slow greens and fired a two under par 69 yesterday to take the first round lead in the 1980 $20,000 Michigan Open at the University of Michigan Golf Course. Looking over Groves' shoulder in second place, one stroke behind are 1974 Open champ Lynn Janson of Comstock Park and 20-year-old amateur Marc Dingman of Milan. THE WOLVERINES' John Morse, this year's amateur champion, finished tied for fifth with a73. With the hot sun bearing down on the course and temperatures ranging in the mid-80's all day, it would be assumed that the putting surfaces would be light- ning quick, but this was not the case. The reason for this was that the Ann Arbor area was decked by a raging thunderstorm Wednesday morning, which felled nearly 200 trees on the course and drenched the fairways and greens. HOWEVER, THESE conditions did not deter the 29-year-old assistant pro from Orchard Lake Country Club from stroking a one under par front nine and a similar tally on the back holes. Karl Daiek of Battle Creek, Al Semrad of Ludington, John Molenda of West Bloomfield and amateur Gary Quitiquit of Plymouth share the distinction of being deadlocked in third place with idential scores of 71. Buddy Whitten of Belmont, David Gilpin of Horton and William Grooms of Detroit pulled into fourth place with a 72. EIGHT GOLFERS finished with 73 including Mor- se, but the biggest surprise of the afternoon was defending champion Randy Erskine. Erskine, who has won the last three Opens in which he has com- peted, struggled to a 74 for the afternoon and a tie for sixth. "My entire game was lousy," said Erskine. "My driving, chipping and putting was all bad so I con- sider myself very lucky to have shot a 74." Leader Groves expressed what the other golfer's main complaint was about the round all day-unusually slow greens. "THE GREENS were true," said Groves. "But they were much slower than in the past. I had a couple of 30 foot putts that I had hit super hard and they wound upa few feet short of the cup. The surface here is a little higher than usual and it affects a golfer's putting stroke. "All in all, I had a good day. It was definitely not my best driving round, but fortunately everything worked." Other golfers expressed their reactions to the greens condition. "I LIKE THE greens slow because it conforms with my style of play," said young Dingman, a junior at Eastern Michigan University. "The putting surfaces were high and bushy but I think they will quicken as the tournament progresses," said Quitiquit. "I agree that the greens were unusually high," con- tinued Erskine. "But the players here should under- stand that the greens cannot be cut for fear that they may be lost due to the warm weather. "THEY SHOULD quit their bellyaching and adjust their game." Janson played a smooth round, playing a one under par back nine. "Oh, I'm very happy with my game with the way it went this afternoon," said the winner of the 1979 Michigan PGA Player of the Year award. "My driving and putting was steady all through this round and I can only hope that it keeps going through the next three days." Dingman was two under par going to the 18th hole, but because of a tee shot that landed against a tree, he was forced to dribble a shot unto the fairway. He had to settle for a bogey and a tie for second place. ,' 0 Watson, Trevino lead British Open MUIRFIELD, Scotland (AP) - Lee Trevino, who usually plays his best in hot weather, defied biting cold, blustery winds and driving rain for a three- under-par 68 Thursday and a tie with Tom Watson for the first-round lead in the 109th British Open Golf Champion- ship. Trevino said he was unruffled by the miserable playing conditions that raked the Muirfield links and left most of the international field of 151 golfers dripping and shivering. "I expect 'em," Trevino said of the conditions. "I work on this tournament mentally. I expect wind, rain and cold weather here. I came prepared. "Heck, you ought to see my suitcase. Heaven save me if it ever turned warm - I'd die. I've got nothing cool to wear." That was nothing to worry about on this squally day. Players went burrowing into layers of sweaters and foul weather gear, crouching in shivering discomfort un- der their umbrellas while waiting their turn to hit. Their pants-legs were soaked to the knees. Some wore stocking caps. Jack Nicklaus and others pulled on mittens. "It was the worst day to play in the British Open since 1964," Nicklaus said. "And, that was the worst day I ever played in." For Watson, it was almost business as usual. He has a history of playing ex- tremely well in extremely bad weather. Maybe the best round he ever played was a 69 - when the average score of the field was 75 - in cold, wind and rain in Nicklaus' Memorial Tournament last year. "I can't explain it," said Watson, who played in the absolute worst of yester- day's weather. "I'd rather play in 85 degree temperatures in my shirt sleeves. Maybe it's because I practice in the cold a lot during the winter at home in Kansas City. And it can get cold in the winter at Kansas City." Whatever the reason, Watson and -Trevino -the two- leading money- winners on the American tour this season - shared a one-stroke advan- tage over an international group of five at 69. They included three young Britons - British PGA champ Nick Faldo, Ryder Cup player Mark James and Glenn Ralph - Vicente Fernandez of Argen- tina and Jack Newton, the Australian Open champion who took Watson to a playoff for the 1975 British Open title. Mark Hayes, who was the first man off the tee, got his round of 70 on the board before the weather really reached its worst. He was tied with Ben Crenshaw, a runner-up in each of the last two British Opens, and two British players, Sandy Lyle and Ken Brown. The group at 71 included former U.S. Open king Jerry Pate, Andy Bean, Derrick Cooper of Great Britain and a pair of South Africans, Mark McNulty and Dale Hayes. Nicklaus, who rejuvenated his slum- ping career with a record-setting vic- tory in the U.S. Open a month ago, had some putting problems on his way to a 73 that left him five strokes back. Ballesteros, the young Spaniard who won the British Open in England last year and added the Masters title this spring, shot a 72 despite what he called a continuing lack of confidence. "I'm not playing well. It's hard to have con- fidence when you're not playing well." David Graham of Australia, the current American PGA champion, shot a 73. Some other American scores: Tom Weiskopf, Craig Stadler, Tom Kite and Larry Nelson, 72; Don Bies and Orville Moody, 73; Bruce Lietzke and Bob Byman, 74; Bill Rogers 76; Hubert Green and Johnny Miller, 77. Although the playing conditions were severe when he was on the course, Trevino said the earlier players, such as Watson and Nicklaus, had the worst of it. "We caught a consistent golf course," he said. "The earlier players were on a golf course that changed on 'em all the time." A key to his effort, Trevino said, was bogeyed two of the next three holes af- a 10-foot par-saving putt on the first ter missing the greens. That put him hole. "That gave me the confidence I back to even, but he reached the par- needed," he said. five ninth in two and two-putted for bir- He dropped a 15-footer on the third die, then played the back in 33. and birdied the fifth from 20 feet, then 0 I *1 6 TOM WATSOM SMILES as he birdies the third hole in yesterday's British Open. Watson finished with a total of 68 which tied him for the lead with Lee Trevino after first round play. 0