Sign up to our free sport newsletter for all the latest news on everything from cycling to boxing
Sign up to our free sport email for all the latest news
Play at the Open was delayed this morning due to heavy rain, but forecasts of 'Armageddon-type' high winds threaten to disrupt more of the tournament and make completing the event by Sunday evening impossible.
The second round of the Open was delayed after torrential rain flooded the Old Course at St Andrews, leaving many of the greens, fairways and bunkers under water.
Play did resume at 10am, though high winds gusting up to 35mph will make scoring extremely difficult.
With pools of water lying all across the Old Course layout and the surrounding streets and car parks completely saturated, the bad weather represents a real headache for the organisers.
"The course still has a lot of standing water on it," said director of greenkeeping Gordon Moir before play resumed. "We are going to have as many people out there as possible with squeegies and pumps.
"It's a little bit disappointing as the course has been in such good condition in the last few weeks."
LATEST LEADERBOARD...
Please allow a moment for the leaderboard to load...
Even stronger winds gusting up to 50mph are forecast on Saturday and the Royal and Ancient organisers will face a difficult task to get the tournament finished on schedule by Sunday.
The second round looks certain to be carried over until the weekend and it will then be tough to cram the final 36 holes into Saturday and Sunday.
"It could be Armageddon-type stuff by the looks of the weather forecast," said Britain's Danny Willett who shot a first-round 66 to lie one stroke off the lead held by American Dustin Johnson.
"When the wind and rain gets up it can be a lottery."
The Open was also hampered by bad weather when it was last held at St Andrews in 2010, with dangerous high winds creating havoc in the second round.
Additional reporting by Reuters
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies