Storms make way through Sandwich

Players don't expect relief from rain, though

? After baking under a sweltering sun the previous two days, Royal St. George’s finally got a bit of stormy weather Wednesday.

A rare afternoon thunderstorm halted practice for the British Open and sent fans scurrying for cover.

“Have you ever seen lightning in England?” Brad Faxon asked.

It didn’t rain long enough to soften the rock-hard links — “I can spit more than that,” Niclas Fasth quipped — but a shift in the wind left players scrambling to adjust their shots.

“I’ve always liked to practice in calm conditions. It’s not such a fright,” defending champion Ernie Els said, grinning. “I’m sure the wind is going to blow 25 miles an hour.”

Just after sundown, another line of showers gave the course a more significant dousing, but the players weren’t counting on much relief.

Asked how much rain would change the course, Faxon replied, “About three days straight.”

  • Ernie’s caddie: Defending champion Els had some extra help as he finished up a practice round.
  • Sergio garcia, right, laughs as his caddie looks to the 17th green. Garcia was among the golfers playing practice rounds Wednesday for the British Open. The golf championship begins today at Royal St. George's in Sandwich, England.

His 4-year-old daughter, Samantha, joined the Big Easy for the final two holes, bounding down the fairways barefooted.

“She was becoming bored at the house,” Els said. “I wanted her to come out and see what it’s like.”

  • Fast crowd: If Kenny Perry seems to play a little faster than usual this week, he has a reason.

Perry’s caddie is friend Billy Glidden, a drag racer from Whiteland, Ind. Perry and Glidden met a few years ago and hit it off, and he invited Glidden to come with him to England, where Perry is playing in his first British Open in 12 years.

“He’s like a brother to me,” Perry said.

Glidden, the son of drag racing icon Bob Glidden, said he has exchanged lessons with Perry. Glidden taught Perry how to drive in drag races, and Perry cut Glidden’s 30 handicap with just one lesson.

Glidden’s not awed by the experience, but appreciative of his friendship with Perry, who has won three of his last four tournaments.

“Until he gets on a streak like this, no one knows that Kenny Perry does anything but be a person like the rest of us,” Glidden said. “He’s very real.”

  • No drugs here: Golf doesn’t have a drug problem and is unlikely to accept global anti-doping rules anytime soon, Royal & Ancient Secretary Peter Dawson said Wednesday.

Dawson said the rule-making organization is willing to discuss mandatory drug testing but believes the issue would face significant opposition.

The World Anti-Doping Agency is pressing all sports to fall in line with a global code setting out uniform drug-testing rules and sanctions.

Dawson said there’s no need to test golfers for drugs, though Greg Norman called for mandatory checks and Nick Price has warned that steroids could be tempting for players looking to keep up with ever-lengthening courses.

“I’m personally pretty convinced that there’s none of it going on,” Dawson said. “I’ve never seen any sign of it.”

  • Long partnership: Bernhard Langer and caddie Pete Coleman, who have been together for 22 years, will part ways after the British Open.

The 62-year-old Englishman will carry the clubs for Lee Westwood after deciding that Langer’s schedule, with frequent long trips to the United States, had become too demanding.

“Basically, he wants to be mostly in America and I don’t want to be stationed there,” Coleman told The Guardian, a British newspaper. “I don’t want to have to work a couple of weeks in the States and then hang around on my own in some motel waiting for him come out and play in another couple of weeks.”

Coleman said the two will remain friends.

  • Betting game: Woods remained a solid favorite with the British bookmakers to win the Open, but money was pouring in on Els.

Woods, winner of eight majors including the 2000 Open at St. Andrews, was a 3-1 pick by Ladbrokes.

The odds on Els repeating last year’s victory at Muirfield were cut from 8-1 to 7-1 after a series of big bets and his five-stroke Scottish Open triumph last weekend.

Canada’s Mike Weir, who won the Masters, was a 16-1 wager. U.S. Open champion Jim Furyk was 20-1.