Khaleej Times

Woods happy with his game; Bryson wins

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dublin — Tiger Woods made it interestin­g again, but slipped from contention on the last day of a tournament. Despite being done in by some poor putting at the Memorial, he believes there still was valuable progress.

“I keep getting a little better,” the 42-year-old Woods said after shooting an even-par 72 on Sunday at Muirfield Village. “Week in, week out, I keep getting just a little bit more fine-tuned.

For instance this week, just to be able to make the slight adaptation­s after the first nine holes and be able to flip it around and shoot a respectabl­e number.”

Woods started the final round five shots off the lead, the third time this year he has been within five to start the last day and couldn’t turn it into a win. Bryson DeChambeau won the event in a playoff.

Playing in the Memorial for the first time in three years, Woods birdied two of the first five holes Sunday before hitting from a fairway bunker on No. 6 to the rough in the back of the green. Still, he managed par.

He hit his approach over the green on No. 7 and settled for par again. He couldn’t make up any ground on the par-3 No. 8, either, leaving his second shot just short of the hole.

Missing a 3-foot par putt on No. 10 was a killer. He made a slick birdie on the par-5 No. 11, but missed a 7-foot birdie putt on No. 12, then hit his tee shot out of bounds on the 13th and finished with a bogey.

Week in, week out, I keep getting just a little bit more fine-tuned. For instance this week, just to be able to make the slight adaptation­s Tiger Woods

He bogeyed the par-3 No. 16 when he missed another short putt, an unfortunat­e trend for Woods in a week when he was hitting the ball well off the tee.

He now turns his attention to the US Open in two weeks.

“I just need to hit better putts,” he said. “This week I didn’t really have, didn’t feel comfortabl­e with my lines, and my feel was a little bit off. Consequent­ly I missed a bunch of putts. But I hit it really good this week, so that’s a positive going into Shinnecock, where ball striking is going to be a must.”

Moving up and then falling back has become a trend for Woods in his comeback bid.

He was one shot behind going into the final round at the Valspar Championsh­ip in March and finished tied for second, a shot behind winner Paul Casey. He was five back at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al the next week, but couldn’t do better than a tie for fifth, eight shots behind winner Rory McIlroy.

He knows he has to improve but is happy with his game overall, especially because before back surgery in April he didn’t know if he would ever walk again, let alone play competitiv­e golf. —

 ?? AP ?? Tiger Woods follows his shot from the rough on the seventh hole during the final round of the Memorial golf tournament. —
AP Tiger Woods follows his shot from the rough on the seventh hole during the final round of the Memorial golf tournament. —

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