4 Sports Page 16 Friday, June 19, 1981 The Michigan Daily Unknown Thorpe surprises field, leads Open with first- round 66 {1 ARDMORE, Pa. (AP)-Jim Thorpe, one of the few blacks on the pro golf tour, birdied the last two holes for a 4- under-par 66 and a surprise one-shot lead yesterday in the first round of the 81st U.S. Open. Thorpe, 31, a one-time running back at Morgan State, is a career struggler, a refugee from the PGA Tour's Monday morning qualifying ranks, a non-winner simply trying to make a living. He's playing in his first U.S. Open after. several unsuccessful attempts to known and the defending champion here, agreed with the general premise that this event has a history of producing surprise leaders in the early going. "A lot of fellows, myself included, sometimes can take a lead, and then their golfing abilities won't allow them to keep the lead. "I don't know how well Thorpe will play the next three rounds. That remains to be seen. "ALMOST ANYONE can lead one the traditionally deep, difficult rough decreed by the sponsoring U.S. Golf Association on its Open courses. J.C. Snead, who used his driver only four times on the historic, 6,528-yard Merion Golf Club course in Philadelphia's Main Line country, chipped in for a birdie on the 18th hole for a 67 that left him alone in second. "Most of the holes here, it's not necessary to kill it," Snead said, "and I've been hitting my irons good." THE GROUP at 68 included former PGA champion David Graham of Australia, Jack Renner, Chi Chi Rodriguez, former national amateur champ John Cook and Bob Ackerman, a club pro from Detroit. In addition to Nicklaus and Miller, the starry group at 69 included Lon Hinkle, Bill Kratzert, former Open champion Hubert Green, Rex Caldwell, George Burns and Tommy Valentine. "This was the day to shoot the low score," Watson said. "The greens are going to get harder and harder and harder, and the scores are going to go higher and higher and higher." THE WEATHER conditions were near perfect-very little wind, with temperatures in the mid-80's under a bright sun. And, in general, the world's best players took advantage of it. There were more than two dozen scores at par or better. In three previous Opens, no one has broken par for 72 holes on the course that makes up in subtle deman- ds, in white sand bunkers and brooks and rough and treacherous, rolling greens and sloping fairways what it lacks in length. Thorpe, however, said it "wasn't playing that tough." ONE OF ONLY a half-dozen blacks in the 250 men who play the pro tour, Thorpe has had indifferent success. He once lost his playing rights for poor per-. formance, played the mini-tours and then rejoined the PGA circuit three years ago. His best season was 1979, when he won $48,000. He hasn't finished higher than second in his career, has collected only $7,000 in winnings this year and has career earnings of slightly over $91,000-less than Watson won in his last two starts. Thorpe said he was not named for the famous American Indian football player and Olympic athlete. "MY MOTHER and father had so many kids, they were running out of names," he said. A powerful hitter, Thorpe said he has "played pretty well in the past, but I just need to put four rounds together. "I'm pleased with the way I played today. I used an iron off the teea lot and kept it on the short grass. "I'm a long hitter, but I'm not ac- curate. Being able to use the irons so much was an advantage for me." He bogeyed the second hole from the left rough, but got the shot back with a 20-foot birdie putt on the next hole. WEDGE SHOTS set up birdie putts of three and 10 feet on the seventh and eighth. A deep bunker on the 11th cost him a bogey but the wedge set up another 10- -foot birdie putt on the 13th. He took sole control on the last two holes, two of the more difficult on the course. A beautiful 3-iron shot left him a three-footer on the 17th, his third deuce of the day, and he dropped a 30-footer on the final hole. SNEAD, A nephew of the famed Sam Snead and runnerup in the 1973 Masters and 1978 Open, has been in a deep slump for several seasons, much of it caused by an errant driver. He used that club only four times this day and went to the one-iron eight times. "I think I can play decent the next three days if I can keep it in the fair- ways," he said. Miller has been troubled by a sore shoulder since winning two tournamen- ts early this year and was in such pain early in the week, "I didn't think I would be playing today," he said. MILLER BIRDIED his first three holes, then cooled off. "I'm going to be very aggressive," he said. "I shouldn't even by playing, so I've got nothing to lose. I'm going to go for every flag." Nicklaus, holder of a record 17 major professional titles, said he "played a pretty good round of golf. Any time you break par in the first round of the U.S. Open, it's a pretty good round of golf. "I'd like to be leading, but I'm really not concerned with the lead until the last round. Until then, I just try to play good, solid golf and stay in contact." HE THREE-PUTTED on the third hole, wedged to four feet for birdie on the eighth, dropped birdie putts of 18 and 15 feet on the 10th and 11th, then took two to get out of a bunker and bogeyed the 15th. Watson, golf's leading money-winner for the last four years, had a tougher struggle in the first round of the tour- nament he has yet to win, the tour- nament that he admits is his greatest ambition. "I didn't keep it in play very well," he said. "I missed six fairways, so I guess I'm lucky to shoot 70. I was a little ner- vous off the first tee and didn't hit a good shot until the fifth hole. "BUT I DIDN'T let it totally get away from me." He wasn't alone in his troubles. Ray Floyd, second only to Watson on the money-winning list and a three-time winner this season, got it in the woods, in the water and in the Scotch broom grass that sprouts from the bunkers. He took a fat 75. South African Gary Player, two-time U.S. Open winner Hale Irwin, and Lee Trevino, who beat Nicklaus in a playoff for the 1971 Open title on this same course, were at 72, 2-over par. Tom Kite, among the pre-tournament favorites, was another shot back at 73. And Arnold Palmer, still trailed by a hopeful army, went to a 77 that included a triple-bogey on the final hole. 4 4 4 BEN CRENSHAW BLASTS his way from the sand trap at the first hole of yesterday's first round in the U.S. Open at the Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. Crenshaw finished the round with a par 78, putting him in a tie for 16th place, four strokes behind surprise leader Jim Thorpe, who notched a four- under-par 66. qualify and was among the more ob- round. But four rounds is something scure pros in the 156-man field. else. The better players are going to be AS SUCH, lacking particularly im- there at the end." pressive credentials, he fits the mold of And many of the better players are* many early-round leaders in the well within striking range of the power- American national championship. ful Thorpe, one of 12 children of a Rox-. "IN THE OPEN, in the first round it's boro, N.C., greenskeeper. always a surprise that leads it," said Nicklaus, seeking to become the first Johnny Miller, a former winner of this man to win five American national title. "Except for last year, the fellow championships and, at 41, still the most leading the first round hardly ever wins feared competitor in the world, was' it." only three back at 69. Miller, a former Last year was an exception. winner of the U.S. and British Opens "Let's see," mused Jack Nicklaus. who said he really didn't expect to be "Last year the first round leaders were playing, also was 1-under par. me and Tom Weiskopf. A couple of TOM WATSON, the Masters cham- relative unknowns." pion and golf's outstanding performer BUT NICKLAUS, generally regarded over the past 4% years, managed to as the finest player the world has match par-70 despite a struggle through 4 4