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Like the Tiger of old

Crowds love monster putt for eagle on 18th hole

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TIGER Woods delivered easily the loudest roar in ending his round with an eagle three to share the lead on day one of the season-ending Tour Championsh­ip in Atlanta.

Woods found the green with his second shot into the par-five 18th and then brilliantl­y holed a putt of just over 25 feet in a five-under par 65 round to tie fellow American Rickie Fowler in heatwave conditions on the East Lake course.

It is the second event in succession Woods has shared the first-round lead. He and Rory McIlroy were tied at 62 after day one of the BMW Championsh­ip in Philadelph­ia.

“To finish with an eagle was nice as I hammered that drive up the left side, and it was nice to see it not in the rough before hitting a five wood to the green,” Woods said.

“Overall, I felt in control today. I had a lot of control over my shots.

“The only hard part was getting my speed on the greens early. I missed every putt, blew it through the hole. I had five, six feet coming back, and once I figured out the pace of these things, it was all good.”

Woods had begun his round with a bogey but soon regrouped with birdies at the fifth and sixth holes on a course where he claimed the FedEx Cup championsh­ip trophy in 2007 and 2009.

He then birdied the 12th and downhill 14th holes ahead of the eagle on 18 in a round that included just 28 putts.

“I played really well today and though it wasn’t exactly the start I was looking for in taking the bogey at one, I made two good putts there at five and six and got to under par, and then from there I hit it pretty good and made a few putts,” Woods said.

“But more than anything, I missed it all on the correct sides. Even the fairways I missed, all were on the correct sides. The shots I missed were on the greens, all had beautiful angles. All in all, I had a lot of control today.”

Fowler capped his round with back-to-back birdies at five and six and while he dropped a shot on seven, the world No.9 birdied eight and then played the 11th to 18th holes in three-under.

“I didn’t get off to necessaril­y a great start on my swing but I managed to kick my way around,” Fowler said.

“I think I missed one fairway, which the ball was in the first cut, and I think I hit every green from there on in. Made it very stress-free.”

World No.1 Justin Rose birdied his closing two holes in a round of 66 to share third place.

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