Clarke best of Irish as Singh takes early lead

For very different reasons Vijay Singh and Tom Lehman were in the spotlight on the opening day of the 70th Masters at Augusta…

For very different reasons Vijay Singh and Tom Lehman were in the spotlight on the opening day of the 70th Masters at Augusta today.

Singh began his bid for a second green jacket with a five-under-par 67 to lead by one from Rocco Mediate.

Defending champion Tiger Woods had a level-par 72 and leading European in the clubhouse with a 71 was David Howell.

American Ryder Cup captain Lehman, meanwhile, managed only a 76 on the lengthened course - and then relived one of the scariest moments of his life.

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Late on Tuesday night the former Open champion's car was shot at as he was driving to Augusta Airport to pick up members of his family.

A bullet hole was found in one of the rear doors and after another incident in the town a 26-year-old man was arrested and jailed.

"It was a very surreal experience," said Lehman. "If it had been coming away from the airport my three-year-old would have been sitting where the bullet hit.

"Every day you read in the newspapers about crazy stuff and I think he was full of Jack Daniel's. I was doing about 50 and he came past me at about 65 with the window down.

"I noticed that because it was cold. Then there was a huge, loud explosion. I flinched, then checked the windscreens and the wheels and when I got out I saw the bullet hole.

"I'm just glad they caught the guy. It was a very random thing and very random things happen in this world. But all's well that ends well.

"He shot at two teenagers as well and they followed him and got the licence plate."

Back on the golf course — at 7,445 yards now the second longest in major history — 2000 winner Singh came home in 32 with birdies at the 11th, 13th, 14th and 15th.

Woods, almost inevitably, produced the biggest roar of what until then had been a fairly subdued crowd when he holed his eight-iron second shot to the 440-yard 14th for an eagle two.

But the world number one, seeking his fifth victory in the event, followed it with a double bogey seven, going into the lake after his lay-out finished in a divot hole.

Ireland's Darren Clarke sank a bunker shot estimated at 100 feet for an eagle three on the long second and parred the next seven holes to turn in 34 and be in joint fifth place. But then came a double-bogey five on the 12th.

Padraig Harrington started five, seven - bogey, double bogey - and needed to chip in on the 12th to stand three over, while Colin Montgomerie also had a seven on the second after tangling with a bunker and was on the same mark after 16.

Lee Westwood turned in level par, but then double-bogeyed the 10th and 14th, while Ian Woosnam, Paul McGinley and Nick Faldo shot 77, 78 and 79 respectively.

McGinley had a tough time from the moment he double-bogeyed the first, going for a two-foot gap in the trees, but hitting a trunk and shooting across the ninth fairway. He was 18th in his one previous Masters in 2002.

British amateur champion Brian McElhinney, from County Donegal, shot 80 and 1988 winner Sandy Lyle was also eight over — after an eagle on the 15th. PA