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"I was dialed in for hitting off the mats," Love said.
He dialed his game in quickly, too, making a birdie on the opening hole of his 2010 season and not making a bogey. He also finished with a birdie, and was pleased.
"I was optimistic," Love said. "But I was anxious about competing. Once I got it going, once I got under par ... I've been out here a long time. You don't forget."
Not so optimistic was Allenby, even though no other player arrived on Oahu with better form. Allenby won the last two times he played, in South Africa and Australia. Just his luck, he went for a walk Monday morning with his wife, Sandy, stepped off a curb the wrong way and twisted his ankle so severely that he thought about withdrawing.
"I've come too far," Allenby said, and considering Hawaii is about halfway between Florida and Australia, no reference is needed. He had been in Florida, for the record, and found the weather far better in Honolulu, anyway.
Like so many other golfers who are injured, Allenby kept the risks and his expectations low. There was that 4-iron he hit cleanly on the tough par-3 fourth hole for birdie, yet also a 6-iron to the green on the par-5 ninth that he couldn't fade because he was afraid to put too much weight on his right ankle. He scrambled for birdie and a share of the lead.
"I think if I was at Kapalua, I wouldn't be able to play," Allenby said. "There is a lot of slide slopes there. But here, it's dead flat. I couldn't have asked for an easier course to play -- walking-wise, not hitting-wise."
He managed both just fine, along with so many others. One round into the Sony Open, 16 players were separated by one shot.
Not everyone had an easy time with it. Fowler, the 21-year-old rookie who lost in a playoff last fall in Arizona, made double bogey on his opening hole and shot 75. John Daly had a 73, bemoaning that he couldn't make a thing.
Merritt had company, too. Among those at 68 were a pair of other rookies in Martin Flores and Brian Stuard, who also was playing a PGA Tour event for the first time. For now, the PGA Tour must feel like paradise.
[Associated Press;
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