The Open 2012: Adam Scott leads the field after opening round of 64

Adam Scott: The Australian leads the way at The Open.SNS Group

Australian Adam Scott sits at the top of the leaderboard at The Open after shooting a 64 in the opening round.

The 31-year-old did not let a final hole bogey spoil his day at Royal Lytham - certainly not when he was told it matched the lowest round ever on the famous Lancashire links in its 11 stagings of the championship.

A rain-softened course was taken apart by the current world number 13 in calm conditions on Thursday.

Scott, with Tiger Woods' former caddie Steve Williams on his bag, said: "I'm very pleased with the start - obviously. My goal starting the week was to play today like it was Sunday and there was no tomorrow. I did a good job of that."

He had five birdies in six holes from the long 11th he was seven under and on the par 70 lay-out one more birdie would have made him the first player in major history to shoot 62.

Pulling his final drive into the rough and failing to salvage his four, however, meant he did not even become the 25th player to sign for a 63.

"I know there's never been a 62," Scott stated.

"When I was waiting to use the bathroom going to the 17th tee I did a look at the leaderboard and realised it was a par 70. I also probably then realised that I wasn't going to be the guy to shoot 62 - it's one of those things that you don't want to go through your mind.

"But making a bogey here or there is fine - making doubles and triples is what really hurts. It was just like a nice walk in the park today and I'm sure there's going to be some weather elements thrown at us the next three days.

"But I'm confident. My ball-striking is good and I think I can get it around no matter what the conditions are."

If he was to triumph Scott would be the 10th successive first-time winner in the majors - but there is, as he is fully aware, a long way to go.

Woods, chasing his fourth Claret Jug and 15th major, birdied four of the first seven holes, but played the rest in one over and there were others who ended the day closer to Scott.

Scot Paul Lawrie, reinvigorated as a golfer in his forties, opened up the possibility of a second victory 13 years after his first with a 65 which equalled his lowest Open score.

That was matched by 2007 Masters champion Zach Johnson - winner of the John Deere Classic last Sunday - and by big-hitting Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts, who missed last year's event following a scooter crash at the start of the week and who was at Lytham in 1996 as a 13-year-old Junior Open competitor.

Among those alongside Woods are four more major winners, namely Graeme McDowell, Ernie Els, reigning Masters champion Bubba Watson and Rory McIlroy - and that despite a double bogey on the 15th after his drive hit a spectator on the head, went 20 yards right and finished out of bounds by a few inches.

"He could have headed it the other way," he joked before adding: "The most important thing was that he was ok. I didn't realise there was out of bounds over there. I was shocked when I was told, but it's just one of those things and I thought I did well to keep my composure."

He drove the green on the 336-yard next, two-putted and also birdied the last.

More About The Open 2012

Related articles