Medicine Hat News

Woods not far off, but Canadian leads Valspar

- DOUG FERGUSON

PALM HARBOR, Fla. Canadian rookie Corey Conners didn’t seem too bothered by the tough swirling wind at Innisbrook on Thursday.

The Listowel, Ont., native, who got into the Valspar Championsh­ip field as an alternate not long after he failed to get through Monday qualifying, didn’t make a bogey until his final hole at No. 9 and shot a 4-under 67.

That gave him a oneshot lead over Nick Watney, Whee Kim and Kelly Kraft. Only three other players, including former PGA champion Jimmy Walker broke 70.

Innisbrook produced the highest average score for the opening round — 72.86 — of the 23 courses used this season. But Conners managed just fine, taking advantage of a tournament he wasn’t sure he would be playing.

He went through Monday qualifying and shot 71, but moments after walking off the course, he was told he got in as an alternate.

“Kind of had a mindset of trying to take advantage of a good break, I guess,” he said.

Tiger Woods smacked his hands into an oak as he let loose of the club during a bold escape from the trees, came within inches of an ace on the next hole, and most importantl­y was among 27 players — just under 20 per cent of the field — to break par.

Woods made five birdies to counter his mistakes in his round of 70, the first time he broke par in the opening round of a PGA Tour event since his 64 in the Wyndham Championsh­ip in August 2015 — just six tour events ago because of back surgeries.

“I enjoy when par is a good score. It’s a reward,” Woods said. “There are some tournament­s when about four holes you don’t make a birdie, you feel like you’re behind. Today, made a couple of birdies, all of a sudden puts me fourth, fifth, right away. That’s how hard it is.”

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