
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- The only thing that spoiled John Cook's comeback was Fred Funk's finish.
Cook, who lost a big lead on the back nine at the Senior British Open on Sunday, played a practice round with Greg Norman at The Broadmoor's East Course this week to prepare for the U.S. Senior Open and to commiserate over their respective final-round failures across the Atlantic.
Norman couldn't hold on to the 54-hole lead at the British Open two weeks ago.
All that pity paid off Thursday when Cook carded a 4-under 66, which was good for the clubhouse lead for most of the day until Funk birdied the 16th and 17th holes to go 6 under before three-putting the final hole and finishing at 5-under 65.
Funk had two birdies and an eagle on the first four holes of a spectacular round that was bogey-free until the 18th hole.
"Obviously, I got off to a ridiculously good start," Funk said. "It was a good day. You can't be displeased with a 65 on this course -- or any course."
Four players were tied for third place at 1 under: Morris Hatalsky, Eduardo Romero, Juan Quiros and Tom Kite.
To read the remainder of this story, click here.
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NEWCOMER HALLBERG FINDS SUCCESS QUICKLY
By Lauren Deason, PGATOUR.COM Editorial Coordinator
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- Don't mention that ugly, dreaded "C" word to Gary Hallberg.

Cut. Hallberg shudders at the sound of it.
"Looking back over my career, I think I had handcuffs on knowing that if you don't make the cut, you don't get paid," Hallberg said, and then offered this hypothetical situation.
"You're out there and you're in 12th place with five holes to go. You make one bogey and all of the sudden you're in 37th place. Now you've got a hard hole and you miss the green. If you don't get up and down, you miss the cut. And I'd played great, almost top 10, then hit two bad shots that were not even bad shots.
"You miss the cut. You go home."
Hallberg thinks the Champions Tour's no-cut policy explains a lot about his recent play. Since turning 50 on May 31, he has had a runner-up finish plus three top-16s in just five events.
And after the first round of the U.S. Senior Open, Hallberg again finds himself near the top thanks to a 1-under 69 on the East Course at The Broadmoor.
Wait a second, though. Does he know that the Senior Open has a cut this week?
To read the remainder of this story, click here.
THE SECRETS TO PLAYING THE BROADMOOR
By Lauren Deason, PGATOUR.COM Editorial Coordinator
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- There's a secret to playing the East Course at The Broadmoor and the Champions Tour players are willing to let you in on it.

The Will Rogers Memorial Shrine of the Sun is an 80-foot observation tower that sits high on the side of Cheyenne Mountain. From the top of the tower, visitors can view all of Colorado Springs and look down upon The Broadmoor resort at the base of the mountain.
It's a great history lesson, no doubt, but what does this have to do with the U.S. Senior Open this week? When Penrose constructed the shrine, he also created a way for players to navigate some of the fastest, curviest and most unpredictable greens this side of the Mississippi.
"The main thing to know [is] the Will Rogers monument up there, and keeping the ball on the other side of the flagstick from the monument. And that's pretty simple logic," Tom Watson said. "It's right-on logic really."
Most putts break away from Cheyenne Mountain, but two greens are a tad bit tricky. R.W. Eaks said that, on the 17th green and one other -- he's not giving away all of his secrets -- putts actually break more into the mountain than away from it.
To learn more about The Broadmoor, click here.
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SECOND CHANCE
Depending on how you view it, Dave Delich is either very lucky or very unlucky.
He was a star hockey player at Colorado College and earned a spot on several U.S. national teams. He traveled the world in the late 1970s, playing everywhere from the Soviet Union -- when the "Iron Curtain" still existed -- to Tokyo to Europe for the American squad.
Delich even practiced with the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team. For seven months before the Olympics in February, Delich and the 24 others on the roster worked as hard as they could for the late coach Herb Brooks.
Here's the unlucky part. Brooks had to cut the roster from 25 men to 20. Though Delich is in most of the team pictures and worked out all winter with the team, he didn't make it to the actual Olympics for the infamous "Miracle on Ice" when the U.S. upset the Soviet squad.
| 65 | Score fired by Fred Funk in the first round, which beats the lowest score in a U.S. Senior Open when par was 70. |
| 68 | Score shot by amateur Rick Cloninger, which tied a U.S. Senior Open record for lowest by an amateur. |
"I've never felt one ounce of regret or should have been there," Delich said. "You're picking a team with 20 guys and, they do this in golf all the time, these Walker Cup captains, and it's not easy and you just go with your gut. I'm just thankful that they had the right guys there at that time to win. It was an incredible event."
Not many people get a second shot at glory. But Delich is lucky because he gets that chance this week. He's a member of The Broadmoor, qualified for the event and shot 76 in the first round. To play for a national championship, at his home course, in front of his family and friends, with his brother Chuck on the bag -- it's a dream come true.
"It was unbelievable," Delich said after his first round. "I expected obviously some family out there and a few friends, but it appears that nobody was working in Colorado Springs this morning. It was a lot of fun."
A TOUGH DAY
The first-round scoring average at Oak Hill Country Club for this year's Senior PGA Championship was 76.858 (+6.858), the highest for an opening round on the Champions Tour this year. The first-round scoring average last week at Royal Troon for the Senior British Open Championship was 76.563 (+5.563), the second highest for a first round in 2008.
Here's how this year's first round compares to past U.S. Senior Opens:
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STRANGEST SIGHT OF THE DAY
There were eagles, birdies and one very peculiar goose on the course in the first round at The Broadmoor.

At the 4th green, a large crowd had gathered to watch John Cook, Craig Stadler and Mark O'Meara. Apparently one goose wanted a front row seat to see Cook, then the tournament leader, in action.
On No. 4, a 163-yard par-3 hole, players have to hit their tee shot over a large pond. One goose swam around in the pond while four others sat on the hill between the pond and the 4th green. While three of the geese kept their heads in the grass, pecking for food, the fourth craned its neck to catch Cook's putt.
After Cook's birdie putt missed, the goose turned toward the 3rd fairway -- which was also visible from the pond -- and watched another group hit their approach shots into the green.
As if that weren't strange enough, it pivoted its neck back in the direction of the 4th green and watched Cook and Stadler make par.
No word on whether it later stopped by the Grey Goose hospitality tent near the 18th hole for a drink.
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