COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Padraig Harrington said he thought it was one part nice, another part disappointing, to scrounge out a bogey after snapping a tee shot deep into the woods on the 15th hole of his opening round at the U.S. Senior Open.
Either way, that scramble Thursday kept Harrington atop the leaderboard, tied with Mark Hensby at 3-under 67 at the Broadmoor, where every shot is an adventure.
"You never feel good after you've lost a ball, so your head is a little scrambled,'' said Harrington, the 2022 champion. ''You're just trying to get your head around what you're doing.''
It's a common feeling on this course at an altitude of 6,000 feet nestled at the base of Cheyenne Mountain — a tilting landscape that impacts every putt in ways not every player can see.
Stewart Cink hit his first 17 greens on a calm opening day, but finished with a bogey on No. 18 after his first miss. He was part of a group of seven, including Thomas Bjorn, at 68.
''It's not the kind of course where you string together four birdie putts in a row, where you're just like ‘hoop, hoop, hoop, hoop,''' Cink said. ''I had some putts out there that were 20-footers that had 8, 9 feet of break, and you're just not going to make that many of those.''
Harrington made all four of his birdies on the (easier) front nine and was leading by one when he snapped his tee shot on the par-4 15th. The Irishman said his disappointment came from the fact that he thought his group conducted its 3-minute search in a thicket of trees that was well short of where the ball landed.
His relief came from scraping out a bogey after heading back to the tee box and hitting that shot in deep rough on the right, then the approach from there to 20 feet.