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It started raining two minutes later.
Shortly after play began, the USGA sent crews out to try and keep the greens dry, and volunteers shooed people away from the hill below the first tee, saying it was too rain-slicked for anyone to walk upon.
"(Holes) one and 18, that's going to be the issue," said Jim Hyler, the chairman of the USGA's championship committee. "Eighteen is the real issue."
Bethpage is hard enough when dry.
It was set up as the second-longest U.S. Open layout in history, and as an added bonus, it was to have three different par-4s measuring more than 500 yards.
The USGA showed a bit of compassion in that regard Thursday. Hole No. 7 was played at 489 yards, down from 525, and the 10th and 12th holes both had tees slightly moved up, putting them just below 500 yards each.
Woods, who beat Rocco Mediate in a playoff last year at Torrey Pines for the title, is the favorite to repeat, since he's always the favorite whenever he plays.
If there's a people's favorite this week, it's Phil Mickelson.
Mickelson isn't from New York, but for the next week, those strangers behind the ropes at Bethpage Black are his new best friends. For his lone practice round Wednesday, many wore pink shirts and ribbons to show support for his wife, Amy, who is fighting with breast cancer. They shouted encouragement whenever the world's No. 2 player walked past and even sang a day-late verse of "Happy Birthday."
He was to tee off in the afternoon Thursday, although that hardly seemed certain because of the rain.
[Associated Press;
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