Price, Couples share first-round lead

New tournament plays major tough on wet layout

? The tournament is new, not the guys leading it.

Fred Couples and Nick Price helped get the Wachovia Championship off to a smashing start Thursday, each posting a 6-under 66 on a Quail Hollow course that left most players wondering if the U.S. Open had moved to May.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if in the future there would be either a U.S. Open or a PGA on this golf course, because they can make it as hard as they want to,” Price said.

It wasn’t a brute, not with rain soaking the course for three days leading up to the opening round. Still, Couples was looking ahead to what the next three days might hold.

“You can see what’s going to happen,” he said. “It’s going to firm up, and all this 66 stuff is going to go away.”

Couples and Price took advantage while they could, getting around with a different style of game that gave them a one-stroke lead over PGA champion Rich Beem.

In his first start since winning the Houston Open to end a five-year drought, Couples played bogey-free and holed two long birdie putts to lead for the fourth straight round on tour.

“I’m riding this wave and playing well,” he said.

Price is on a high of his own. Two days ago, he was introduced as the latest member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, and he cautioned tour officials not to etch in stone his 18 victories on the PGA Tour. He might have at least another one left in him.

Nick Price grins after making a birdie putt on the seventh hole at Quail Hollow golf course. Price shares the first-round lead with Fred Couples at the Wachovia Championship in Charlotte, N.C.

Price birdied four of his last seven holes, saving par with an 8-foot putt on No. 9.

It was a prime example why he’s not bothered by a course that measures 7,396 yards. Price had 201 yards left to the green, but was able to hit a low iron that ran up and just over the putting surface.

“It’s a straightforward, honest golf course,” Price said. “There is no goofiness to it. I don’t mind playing a par-4 that’s 490 yards long if you allow me to run the ball up to the green. You get what you play here. I think that’s what we all look for on a great course.”

Paul Goydos holed out from 199 yards in the 18th fairway for eagle and joined Jeff Brehaut at 68.

Mike Weir, in his first tournament since winning the Masters, holed an 8-iron from 161 yards in the rough at No. 11 for eagle and wound up at 72.

Like most players, anything around par was satisfactory. The only disappointment for the Canadian was his introduction on the first tee. Just like the course, it was straightforward — no mention of anything he has won lately, like a green jacket.

“I was waiting for that ringing in my ear … Masters champion,” Weir said with a smile. “Maybe I’ll get that down the road.”

Fred Couples watches his tee shot on the 17th hole. Couples shot 66 Thursday in Charlotte, N.C.

The most peculiar part of the first round was that the best scoring came in the afternoon, when Quail Hollow began to dry out. Stephen Ames had the best score among early starters, a 3-under 69.

David Toms and Charles Howell III were in the large group at 70. Both played in the morning, and both had no complaints.

“I played well and shot 2 under,” Howell said. “If you shoot 2 under at New Orleans, you’re thinking about jumping off a building.”

Toms, who hasn’t won since 2001, found Quail Hollow tough, fair and waiting for a call from the USGA.

“It’s a U.S. Open-style golf course, except I think there are a few more birdie opportunities,” he said. “Just a great test of golf. Come Sunday afternoon, you’re going to have to play some really good golf to be able to win. And I like that.”

It’s the first PGA Tour event in Charlotte since the Kemper Open left for Maryland in 1979.