Baltimore Sun

Woods part of entertaini­ng opening day at Bay Hill

Former PGA champ Walker takes 1-shot lead with eagle on No. 18

- By Doug Ferguson

ORLANDO, FLA. — Tiger Woods was out-of-bounds by inches and holed a 70-foot birdie putt , and he was only part of the entertainm­ent Thursday at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al.

Former PGA champion Jimmy Walker, who wasn’t even planning to be at Bay Hill until he mixed up the dates for a trip to Augusta National, holed a wedge from 132 yards for eagle on No. 18 that gave him a 5-under 67 and a one-shot lead over Woods, Patrick Reed and Byeong Hun An.

The action never stopped. The loudest cheers were around Woods.

Woods returned to Bay Hill for the first time since his record eighth victory in 2013, and it was like he had never left. The gallery was enormous, especially with an unseasonab­le chill in the air, and he delivered a memorable show.

Last week at Innisbrook was the first time he broke par in the opening round since his return following a fourth back surgery. Thursday at Bay Hill was the first he broke 70. Each round seems to get a little better.

“I feel like I’m not really thinking as much around the golf course,” Woods said. “I can just see and feel it and go.”

Rory McIlroy, among those playing in the afternoon, already was at 5 under through 10 holes.

Coming off a runner-up finish at the Valspar Championsh­ip that raised expectatio­ns of a victory being closer than ever, Woods started and finished strong, with one mishap in the middle.

His drive on No. 3, his 12th hole of the round, sailed to the right and went off a cart path and toward the houses. Only when he reached the ball did Woods find it rolled into the bottom of a mesh fence. It looked like it was in play, except the poles on the waist-high fence were the boundaries, and his ball was inches outside of them.

He went back to the tee, sprayed the next tee shot under a tree and made double bogey.

And then came the big finish — two birdies on the par 5s, including a bold flop shot from a tight lie over a bunker at No. 6 — and then a 70-foot putt he was hoping would be close. Woods immediatel­y pressed his hand down, asking for the ball to slow down, and then watched it drop for a most unlikely birdie.

He closed with a 12-foot putt to save par from the bunker.

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