KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Jim Colbert birdied the first eight holes on the back nine en route to a course-record 61 and the first-round lead Friday in the TD Waterhouse Championship.
Jim Colbert had only two birdie putts longer than 8 feet on the back nine.
Colbert, a Kansas City native and two-time winner of this Senior Tour event, missed a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 18.
"I was really trying to make that putt on the last hole so if anybody asked me how'd you do on the back nine, I could have said, `I birdied it,' " Colbert said.
"It's the craziest game in the world. I shoot 61, make eight birdies in a row. And for about a minute and a half, I was not happy."
He began the round with an eagle on Tiffany Greens' par-5 opening hole.
During his birdie spree on the back nine, he made only one lengthy putt -- a 25-footer on the par-4 12th. The rest of the time, every approach shot nestled onto the green within 3 to 8 feet of every cup. A 5-iron shot on the par-4 18th left him about 12 feet away from becoming the first man in any PGA Tour-sanctioned event to birdie every hole on any back or front nine.
His putt slid off to the right a few inches.
"As soon as I hit that putt, I knew it wasn't going in," he said. "I really wanted that putt."
Jay Sigel was 9-under on the back nine during a senior tournament two years ago, but he did it with a par and an eagle and seven birdies.
Tom Watson, the hometown favorite whose gallery was several times greater than Colbert's most of the day, shot a 70.
Tom Jenkins and Dana Quigley took advantage of the near-perfect playing conditions to shoot 65s.
Bruce Fleisher, a three-time winner and the Senior Tour's top money-winner this year, opened with a 66. Five others were at 67.
Colbert, who helped design "Colbert Hills," a championship course recently opened in nearby Manhattan, Kan., tied the senior record of eight straight birdies set by Chi Rodriguez in 1987. The
61 tied his own career record.
"The hardest decision I had to make was the second shot on 18," he said. "Can I keep it on the green with a 5-iron? That was probably the best swing I made, and the biggest decision."
Quigley, playing with Colbert, birdied the first four holes of the back nine but was hardly noticed.
"He was in a trance," Quigley said. "It was spectacular. It was fun to watch."
Watson, playing his first competitive round in his hometown since 1971, admitted he was nervous.
"It was a disappointing day," he said. "The golf course was very benign. Very little wind, greens are holding. Throw anything at the flag, it stops. Two-under par seemed like about 3-over."
Colbert, 59, agreed he was in something like a trance.
"I guess so," he said. "I had no nerves. Nothing. I was just pretty well focused. I was very fluid. My swing was very fluid. Everything was clear."
Colbert's lead might be even harder to overcome if weather conditions are not as ideal as they were Friday.
"It can get pretty windy around here," Colbert said. "This is the calmest day we've had in the two years we've played here."
Watson admitted the odds were long against him.
"I'm way behind. But is there a 61 in me? There might be," he said. "I've played well enough this year to shoot a 61 if my putter would cooperate."