Just beachy: Jones on top at Pebble
By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press


PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — The celebrity watch at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am took place everywhere but the top of the leaderboard Thursday.

Kent Jones birdied the two most famous par 3s at Pebble Beach and kept bogeys off his card for a 6-under 66 and a one-shot lead, an encouraging start for someone who has played 270 tournaments on the PGA Tour without finishing in the top five.

Nationwide Tour grad Roland Thatcher was a shot back along with Q-school grad Brad Adamonis and John Mallinger, third at Pebble Beach last year as a rookie.

The star gazing took place at Poppy Hills, and while it didn't always produce great golf to match the spectacular sunshine on the Monterey Peninsula, it was entertaining.

Defending champion Phil Mickelson was on the verge of shooting himself out of the tournament until a birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie burst enabled him to recover with a 71.

Greg Norman, playing on the PGA Tour for the first time in 18 months, was holding steady until a four-putt on the 13th hole for a double bogey. He finished with a 76. His fiancee, tennis great Chris Evert, flew in from Florida and didn't make it out to the golf course until Norman was on the 16th.

Evert has no plans to take up golf, saying it was too time-consuming with three boys — “It’s like four boys with Greg,” she said — and a tennis academy to run.

“Tennis only takes one hour,” she said, laughing.

These rounds take close to six hours with two pros and two amateurs in every group, and it was a slow, steady grind.

Norman struggled with that and the bumpy greens, but he had no complaints about how he hit the ball.

“It's a long day of concentration, which I’m not used to,” Norman said. “You get past four hours, you really have to stay locked in.”

Jones, a 41-year-old from New Mexico who has yet to finish in the top 100 on the money list, has been around long enough to realize that one round is too early to get excited, especially in a format that uses three courses, and in a tournament where the leaderboard doesn’t begin to sort itself out until Sunday.

“I think I’m just satisfied that I played well and putted well,” Jones said. “When everyone is playing different golf courses, being in the lead isn’t every important. But it’s nice to be playing well, obviously.”

J.B. Holmes, coming off a playoff victory over Mickelson last week in Phoenix, had a 68 at Spyglass Hill to join a group of 10 players that included Todd Demsey, who recently recovered from having a tumor removed from his brain.

The top 14 players on the leaderboard have combined for 10 career victories, and that doesn’t include the California State Amateur that Demsey won in 1992.

Davis Love III, returning to the PGA Tour for the first time in four months after a severe ankle injury, overcame an early gaffe on the par-5 14th at Spyglass with three birdies on his back nine for a 70. Vijay Singh also had a 70.

Mickelson was thrilled to even be remotely near the lead.

Lefty had big expectations for his week as he tries to become the first back-to-back winner at Pebble Beach since Mark O’Meara in 1989-90. But he bogeyed his first two holes, had to save par from the fringe on the par-5 ninth, then clipped a tree and went into the water on the par-5 10th, taking another bogey, putting him at 4 over for the round.

Poppy Hills has five par 5s, and Mickelson played the first three in 2 over.

“I was just trying to get back to even par,” Mickelson said. “If I shot 3 or 4 over, I would be shooting myself out of the tournament.”

Instead, he shot himself back into it.

After holing a 30-foot birdie on the 11th, Mickelson hit a hybrid from 240 yards that covered the flag and settled 4 feet away for eagle. Then came a wedge that landed 10 feet beyond the flag and spun back slowly to a foot, followed by another approach to 3 feet on the 14th that put him 1 under for the tournament.

Standing on the 15th tee during another backup, Daniel Chopra looked at Mickelson’s score and looked perplexed.

“Weren’t you 4 over a minute ago?” he said.

Chopra, who opened the season with a victory in the Mercedes-Benz Championship, had a 69 while playing with his twin. That would be comedian George Lopez, who broke out a visor-wig combination to mimic Chopra’s spiked, bleach-colored hair.

“I’ve seen those at Bay Hill,” Chopra said, who decided his name would be “Chopez” the rest of the week.

Mickelson ended his streak with a bogey on the 15th, and he didn’t make his first par until the 16th hole, when he missed a 6-footer. After another par on the 17th, caddie Jim Mackay said to no one in particular, “Do we get a prize for back-to-back pars?”

He ended with a birdie for a 71, and this was one time he could accept that at Poppy Hills.

“It’s not a great start,” he said. “But at least I put myself in position where if I shoot a low round tomorrow, I can get myself right back in the tournament.”

He was only five shots behind a group of players without his pedigree, so it wasn’t all that bad.

Divots: Natalie Gulbis was inside the ropes at Pebble Beach as a caddie for Ted Forstmann, who owns IMG... Tadd Fujikawa opened with a 72 at Spyglass Hill. The 17-year-old from Hawaii has not made the cut since he turned pro last summer... John Daly opened with a 78 while playing with actor Kevin James.



Scores with relation to par from the first round of the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am played Feb. 7 at the the par-72, 6,816-yard Pebble Beach Golf Links (b), par-72, 6,858-yard Spyglass Hill Golf Course (s), and par-72, 6,833-yard Poppy Hills Golf Course (h) in Pebble Beach, Calif.: 

1. Kent Jones 66b

-6
2. John Mallinger 67h

-5
2. Roland Thatcher 67s

-5
2. Brad Adamonis 67s

-5
5. Jay Williamson 68b

-4
5. Michael Allen 68h

-4
5. J.B. Holmes 68s

-4
5. Kris Cox 68b

-4
5. D.A. Points 68s

-4
5. Tim Herron 68b

-4
5. Robert Floyd 68b

-4
5. Mark Wilson 68h

-4
5. Olin Browne 68b

-4
5. Todd Demsey 68s

-4
15. Jeff Quinney 69b

-3
15. Daniel Chopra 69h

-3
15. Y.E. Yang 69h

-3
15. Nicholas Thompson 69s

-3
15. Andrew Buckle 69s

-3
15. Brent Geiberger 69h

-3
15. Jason Day 69h

-3
15. Steve Allan 69h

-3
15. Brandel Chamblee 69b

-3
15. Dudley Hart 69b

-3
15. Steve Lowery 69s

-3
26. Alejandro Canizares 70h

-2
26. Jonathan Kaye 70h

-2
26. Marc Turnesa 70b

-2
26. Doug LaBelle II 70b

-2
26. J.J. Henry 70b

-2
26. Davis Love III 70s

-2
26. Vijay Singh 70b

-2
26. Tom Pernice, Jr. 70b

-2
26. Charley Hoffman 70h

-2
26. Tom Scherrer 70b

-2
26. Parker McLachlin 70h

-2
26. Jeff Overton 70s

-2
26. Jason Gore 70h

-2
26. Justin Leonard 70h

-2
26. Michael Letzig 70b

-2
26. Matt Jones 70b

-2
26. Kevin Streelman 70h

-2
26. Jonathan Moore 70h

-2
44. Robert Damron 71s

-1
44. Kevin Na 71b

-1
44. Ryan Armour 71h

-1
44. Dan Forsman 71s

-1
44. Phil Mickelson 71h

-1
44. Jim McGovern 71s

-1
44. Daisuke Maruyama 71s

-1
44. David Frost 71b

-1
44. Carlos Franco 71s

-1
44. Peter Tomasulo 71b

-1
44. John Merrick 71h

-1
44. Ryan Moore 71s

-1
44. Mathew Goggin 71b

-1
44. Ted Purdy 71h

-1
44. Duffy Waldorf 71h

-1
44. Jim Furyk 71s

-1
44. Brian Bateman 71s

-1
61. Rocco Mediate 72b

E
61. Johnson Wagner 72b

E
61. Brian Davis 72b

E
61. Jin Park 72s

E
61. Padraig Harrington 72b

E
61. Craig Kanada 72h

E
61. Alex Cejka 72b

E
61. Kenneth Ferrie 72s

E
61. Jeff Gove 72b

E
61. Michael Sim 72b

E
61. James Driscoll 72h

E
61. Frank Lickliter II 72b

E
61. Greg Kraft 72h

E
61. Harrison Frazar 72s

E
61. Steve Pate 72b

E
61. Jeff Maggert 72s

E
61. Larry Mize 72b

E
61. Cody Freeman 72b

E
61. J.P. Hayes 72s

E
61. Omar Uresti 72s

E
61. John Riegger 72b

E
61. Jimmy Walker 72b

E
61. Tadd Fujikawa 72s

E
84. Peter Jacobsen 73h
+ 1
84. Andres Romero 73b
+ 1
84. Brad Elder 73b
+ 1
84. Brandt Snedeker 73h
+ 1
84. John Morse 73s
+ 1
84. Tim Clark 73b
+ 1
84. Tag Ridings 73h
+ 1
84. Fredrik Jacobson 73s
+ 1
84. Marco Dawson 73s
+ 1
84. Garrett Willis 73h
+ 1
84. Corey Pavin 73s
+ 1
84. Richard S. Johnson 73b
+ 1
84. Martin Laird 73b
+ 1
84. Tommy Gainey 73h
+ 1
84. Scott Sterling 73s
+ 1
84. Skip Kendall 73h
+ 1
84. Charlie Wi 73s
+ 1
84. Paul Goydos 73s
+ 1
84. John Huston 73b
+ 1
84. Chris Riley 73b
+ 1
84. Grant Waite 73h
+ 1
84. Dustin Johnson 73h
+ 1
84. Chris Stroud 73s
+ 1
84. Greg Owen 73s
+ 1
108. Eric Axley 74b
+ 2
108. Craig Stadler 74h
+ 2
108. Gavin Coles 74s
+ 2
108. Justin Bolli 74s
+ 2
108. Paul Stankowski 74h
+ 2
108. Andrew Magee 74s
+ 2
108. Craig Barlow 74b
+ 2
108. D.J. Trahan 74h
+ 2
108. Bob May 74h
+ 2
108. Tim Wilkinson 74h
+ 2
108. Mike Wilson 74h
+ 2
108. Jay Delsing 74h
+ 2
108. Rick Leibovich 74b
+ 2
108. Patrick Sheehan 74h
+ 2
108. Chris DiMarco 74s
+ 2
108. Paul Claxton 74s
+ 2
108. Robert Gamez 74s
+ 2
108. Bob Heintz 74h
+ 2
108. David Lutterus 74s
+ 2
108. Joel Kribel 74s
+ 2
108. Pat Perez 74h
+ 2
108. Glen Day 74h
+ 2
108. Lee Janzen 74b
+ 2
108. Joe Ogilvie 74h
+ 2
108. Bo Van Pelt 74h
+ 2
108. Jason Allred 74s
+ 2
108. Ron Whittaker 74b
+ 2
135. Guy Boros 75h
+ 3
135. Billy Andrade 75s
+ 3
135. Mike Weir 75b
+ 3
135. Mathias Gronberg 75h
+ 3
135. Ken Duke 75s
+ 3
135. Bob Burns 75h
+ 3
135. Dean Wilson 75h
+ 3
135. David Duval 75b
+ 3
135. Hunter Mahan 75b
+ 3
135. Matt Kuchar 75h
+ 3
135. Jonathan Byrd 75s
+ 3
135. Len Mattiace 75s
+ 3
135. Tom Lehman 75s
+ 3
135. Spike McRoy 75b
+ 3
149. Travis Perkins 76s
+ 4
149. Chris Smith 76s
+ 4
149. Nick Watney 76b
+ 4
149. Tom Byrum 76b
+ 4
149. Mark Hensby 76s
+ 4
149. Scott McCarron 76b
+ 4
149. Kevin Sutherland 76h
+ 4
149. Mike Heinen 76s
+ 4
149. Greg Norman 76h
+ 4
149. Brenden Pappas 76h
+ 4
149. Chad Collins 76h
+ 4
149. J.L. Lewis 76b
+ 4
149. Bob Sowards 76h
+ 4
149. Tim Petrovic 76b
+ 4
149. Phil Tataurangi 76b
+ 4
149. Kyle Thompson 76h
+ 4
165. Mark Brooks 77s
+ 5
165. Shane Bertsch 77b
+ 5
165. Colt Knost 77b
+ 5
165. Jim Gallagher, Jr. 77b
+ 5
165. Willie Wood 77b
+ 5
170. Brett Rumford 78h
+ 6
170. Jason Dufner 78s
+ 6
170. Ross Fisher 78s
+ 6
170. Ryan Dillon 78s
+ 6
170. Richard Johnson 78s
+ 6
170. Ryan Palmer 78s
+ 6
170. Steve Elkington 78h
+ 6
177. John Daly 79h
+ 7
177. Joey Sindelar 79s
+ 7
177. Dicky Pride 79h
+ 7
180. Keith Clearwater 85s
+ 13



Posted: 2/7/2008
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