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"More shocked probably than anything," Vaughan said. "I did everything you were supposed to do. It was nothing crazy."
Loren Roberts and amateur Tim Jackson, the leader a year ago after two rounds, shot 68s. Tom Lehman, Joe Ozaki and Michael Allen were another stroke back along with Calcavecchia and Langer, the British Senior Open winner Sunday. Ozaki hit a tee shot on the par-5 second hole that traveled 50 yards before finding the limbs of a cedar. He still managed par.
Other favorites were far off the leaderboard. Defending champ Fred Funk shot 76. U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin needed a birdie on his final hole to shoot 72. Jay Haas was 2 under on his first nine, before a trio of bogeys coming home. He had a 70.
"The rough is not brutal, but you almost can't get to the green anyway because there is always a tree in the way," Haas said.
Watson and Couples were the marquee group teeing off before 8 a.m. The 60-year-old Watson said earlier this week he thought there would be a number of high scores during the tournament. But with cool, receptive conditions, Watson was aggressive and found himself in a tie for the lead at 3 under after dropping a downhill birdie putt on the third, his 12th hole, to go with birdies on Nos. 12, 17 and 2.
Watson said the fatigue of traveling eight time zones from the Senior British Open to the West Coast finally caught up with him, though. He made bogeys with poor iron shots at Nos. 6, 8 and 9 to close his round of 70.
"I'm tired and hurting," Watson said. "When you wake up at 1 o'clock in the morning and can't go back to sleep, it's tough to play."
[Associated Press;
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