Toronto Star

PGA: Tiger breaks 70 for first time since return, ‘has a shot’ at winning

- DOUG FERGUSON

PALM BEACH GARDENS, FLA.— Luke List can understand why he might be overlooked in the Honda Classic, even with a shot at his first PGA Tour victory.

List and Jamie Lovemark were trading birdies and keeping clean cards on the front nine at PGA National before an audience of no more than a few dozen people. Everyone else was busy watching Tiger Woods try to stay close enough to contention.

“I know I’ll be an underdog going against Justin Thomas and guys like that, which is fine,” List said. “It’s kind of nice having Tiger in the field now because he takes all the attention off everybody else, so you can just kind of go out and do your own thing.”

His thing was strong enough at PGA National. List finished with a pair of birdies around his lone bogey for a 4-under 66, giving him a one-shot lead over Thomas and Webb Simpson. List was at 7-under 203.

Woods made bogeys on the notorious par 3s on the back nine, and finished with a birdie for a 69. It was the first time he broke 70 on the PGA Tour in the 12 rounds since he first stepped away with a series of back surgeries after the 2015 Wyndham Championsh­ip.

And while only 10 players were ahead of him, Woods still was seven shots behind.

“I’ve got a shot going into tomorrow,” Woods said.

Thomas, the PGA champion, had three birdies over his last five holes for a 65 to match the low round of the toughest tournament this year on the PGA Tour.

Particular­ly impressive was that two of those birdies were on the par-3 15th and par-3 17th, the second- and third-toughest holes at PGA National on Saturday. He essentiall­y hit the same shot, a cut 6-iron into the wind to right pins and made 15-footers.

Simpson, the former U.S. Open champion who has not won in more than four years, played bogey-free for a 66, a card kept clean by a remarkable bunker save with an awkward stance behind the 15th green.

Woods has been progressiv­ely better every day at PGA National. He made his two bogeys on the notorious par 3s on the back nine, but he putted for birdie 14 out of 18 holes, and only one of those putts was longer than 25 feet.

“Probably the highest score I could have shot today,” Woods said.

 ??  ?? Tiger Woods fired a 69 on Saturday for his best round on the PGA Tour since a series of back surgeries.
Tiger Woods fired a 69 on Saturday for his best round on the PGA Tour since a series of back surgeries.

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