Irish Daily Mail

TIGER’S FEAT!

Woods’ monster 71ft putt as astonishin­g revival gathers pace

- By DEREK LAWRENSON

NINE more holes into Tiger Woods’s astounding comeback yesterday was all it took for the bookmakers to run for cover and make him favourite for the Masters in less than three weeks.

As completely illogical as it sounds, the 42-year-old is ticking so many boxes at such a furious rate of progress there seems little doubt that he will stand on the first tee at Augusta National next month as the man to beat.

A man who will be ranked outside the world’s top 50 by then and possibly outside the top 100 starting out as the pick of the bunch? Extraordin­ary times.

Woods shrugged off his only errant shot — a three wood at the third (his 12th hole) that flew out of bounds and led to a double bogey — to post another accomplish­ed round of 68 to lie one shot behind the early leader, former USPGA champion Jimmy Walker, in the first round of the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al.

Like Woods, Patrick Reed continued his good form from the Valspar Championsh­ip last week – he finished runner-up alongside the 14-time major champion – with a 68 of his own, while Justin Rose shot 69.

No golfer in history has ever won the same event nine times but good luck to Rose and everyone else perched on the leaderboar­d in their efforts to prevent Tiger’s fourth start since his return from fusion surgery – and his last appearance before the season’s first major – ending in his 80th win in all and a landmark ninth in this tournament alone.

What made this such a formidable round with the Masters in mind was Woods’ work around the greens, which compared very favourably with the glory days of old – and there’s no greater compliment than that.

Chipping from tight lies is an absolute pre-requisite for Augusta and at Bay Hill, Tiger made such a precise skill look a breeze.

At the par five 6th, he had no green to work with but floated a wedge shot so beautifull­y over a bunker from 25 yards that it nestled next to the flag.

His putting wasn’t bad either. At the tough par three 7th he was 71ft away with his tee shot but still rolled it in for his third birdie in four holes, following his ugly double.

As you can imagine, that produced a decentsize­d roar. Just for good measure Woods, who birdied all four par fives, holed another good putt from 15ft for par at his last hole, the 9th.

‘I’ve got my feels back,’ warned Tiger afterwards, which will probably see his Masters odds fall still further. ‘There’s a lot of gambleholi­cs out there,’ he said, smiling, when told he was now the favourite.

Defeated by one Englishman in Paul Casey last Sunday, Woods might end up duelling with another this weekend.

The gutsy Rose made an astonishin­g recovery from four over par early on with seven birdies in 10 holes.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Back in business: Tiger breaks into a beaming smile after he rolls in that long putt
GETTY IMAGES Back in business: Tiger breaks into a beaming smile after he rolls in that long putt

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