Daily News

Woods eyes final piece of his return

- DOUG FERGUSON

TIGER Woods returned to the US Open for the first time in three years and hardly anyone noticed. Then again, it was late Sunday afternoon. Shinnecock Hills was practicall­y empty.

“A bizarre experience,” said Jordan Spieth, who played nine holes with him.

Yesterday, after going nine holes with Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau, winners of the last two PGA Tour events, Woods said: “Golf is always frustratin­g. There’s always something that isn’t quite right, and that’s where we as players have to make adjustment­s. You’ve seen the tournament­s I’ve played this year. There’s always something. Hopefully, this is one of those weeks where I put it all together.”

It has been 10 years since Woods won his last US Open, his 14th and last Major. All it takes for him to temper any frustratio­ns is to look back at last year, when he didn’t know if he would even play another US Open.

He was at a low point in his career and his personal life. While recovering from fusion surgery – his fourth surgery on his back in three years – he was arrested on a DUI charge and found to have a mixture of two painkiller­s, the sleeping aid Ambien, the anti-anxiety drug Xanax and the active ingredient for marijuana in his system. He entered a clinic to get help and pleaded guilty to a reckless driving charge that kept him out of jail.

That seems like longer than a year ago because Woods has been such an active part of the PGA Tour again. In some instances, he looks like the same Woods. He hit one drive past Johnson on the par-5 fifth hole yesterday that left him a 2-iron to the front of the green. He had two chances to win in March, missing a long birdie putt on the last hole in Innisbrook and hitting a drive out-of-bounds on the 16th hole at Bay Hill the following week.

But no trophies. No fist pumps. “There’s two ways of looking at that,” Woods said. “I’ve given myself chances to win, which I didn’t know if I was ever going to do again. And then again, not happy with the fact that I didn’t win because I loved how it felt being there.”

What kind of opportunit­ies will Shinnecock Hills offer?

Yesterday was the busiest day of practice. Woods played nine holes in the afternoon on Sunday and Monday – a change from the days when he would sweep the dew off the grass first thing in the morning – and nine holes yesterday morning.

And while the crowd was relatively sparse for his morning round, there is no mistaking when Woods is around.

Jason Day was on the putting green when only a few people were around. And then suddenly, there was a gathering.

“He rolls up and there’s 30 guys on the putting green, and it was hard to do your work,” Day said. “But that’s just the Tiger effect.”

Woods last played in the US Open in 2015 at Chambers Bay. He was coming off the highest score of his career, an 85 in the third round at the Memorial, and never stood a chance on the course built over a former gravel pit. He shot rounds of 80-76 and was gone by the weekend, and before long, he was gone from golf with the first of his back surgeries.

Three years from his last US Open, five years from his last victory, and so much has changed.

Johnson returned to No 1 in the world with his six-shot victory last week at the St Jude Classic, the 18th of his career, all since Woods won his last US Open. He replaced Justin Thomas, the PGA champion who turned 25 in April.

Woods will play with both of them when the first round begins tomorrow.

“I can see that there may be a sense of... this is the last kind of push he needs for his career,” Day said. “But at the same time, I know that he’s still hungry. I think he’s hungry for that next win… coming back and playing well against our generation now… I think that’s what he’s looking forward to.” – AP

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? ON THE PROWL: Tiger Woods during yesterday’s practice round at Shinnecock Hills.
PICTURE: REUTERS ON THE PROWL: Tiger Woods during yesterday’s practice round at Shinnecock Hills.

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