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McDowell battered but alive

Graeme McDowell looked like he had just gone 18 rounds with Mike Tyson after he suffered a late collapse but still kept alive his chances of grabbing a second US Open triumph in three years

The 2010 champion raced to two under par for the championship with four holes to play but dropped three shots coming home at a punishing Olympic Club for a two-over 72 to finish the day two shots behind clubhouse leader Jim Furyk on one over par.

McDowell grimaced. “It’s just tough to have fun out there, I got to be honest with you. It’s just a brutal test of golf.

“I played the golf course what I figured is the more difficult way around today starting on nine and finishing off on those front eight there which are a pretty stout test of golf.

“I’m disappointed to bogey three of the last four today... but that’s what this golf course can do to you in a heartbeat.

“If you had offered me one over par starting on the first tee yesterday having seen what I saw yesterday morning, I would have probably snapped your arm off for it.

“So very happy. I think I played some really nice golf the last two day, made enough birdies to kind of offset some mistakes which I think is key.”

The world No 21 came into the US Open on the back of three missed cuts from this last four starts.

But he insisted he had good vibrations about a return visit to the US west coast for a US Open and a first round 69 boosted his confidence.

“My caddie said if you can’t draw some confidence out of this round today, there’s something wrong with you,” McDowell said on Thursday night.

Dressed in pink slacks, the 32-year-old looked every inch a US Open champion as he set off from the ninth.

But while he three-putted his opening hole from 45 feet for bogey, he bounced back with a birdie from 15 feet at the 10th and put on an exhibition for the next 13 holes.

“There’s a fine line on this golf course between sort of 68 and 78 really,” McDowell warned after his opening round. “One of the big keys this week is to get off to a nice start and don’t let the place beat you up too early.”

The tee at the monster par-five 16th was moved and playing “just” 609 yards of its full 670 yards. But McDowell still made birdie, following three perfect shots with a perfectly weighted 15-foot put down the hill.

He couldn’t birdie the par-five 17th from the left trap or the short 18th.

And while he bogeyed the first after carving his tee shot down the hill, he did well to limit the damage to just one stroke.

Close to 180 yards from the green in two after chipping out, he finished 45 feet away in three, knocked his par putt 10 feet past the hole but buried the return. Bogeys can taste like birdies at the US Open but that one almost smacked of eagle.

The course was getting the better of playing partner Sergio Garcia, who roared a four-letter word after a sloppy bogey at the 11th.

But the Spaniard lost it again at the par-three third, smashing an ambient microphone after a bogey-bound tee shot as McDowell knocked home a 20-footer for birdie to get to two under for the championship again.

The third member of the three-ball, 2003 US Open winner Furyk, also made birdie to get to within three of overnight leader Michael Thompson on one under.

McDowell was still the man making the running. But just when he looked in total control, he missed the fifth green and bogeyed and then bunkered his approach to the sixth from the rough and dropped another shot.

Unable to birdie the driveable seventh from the rough, where he did well to avoid a three-putt bogey, McDowell finished on a low note when he went through the back of the eighth and couldn’t get up and down for par.

As Garcia hit a 71 to finish on four over. Furyk was at his grinding best on a scorching San Francisco morning as he carded three birdies and two bogeys in a one-under-par 69 to lead in the clubhouse on one under.

He was two shots clear of McDowell, American debutant John Peterson (70) and Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts (69).

Paying tribute to Furyk, McDowell said: “You’ve got to play Jim Furyk golf. I watched yesterday and I watched it again today. He doesn’t take chances he doesn’t have to take on.

“He gets it back in the fairway. He putts well. Holes out well. Takes his chances when it comes. And that’s my type of golf as well.”

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