Boston Herald

A new day for Tiger

- By DOUG FERGUSON

POTOMAC, Md. — Tiger Woods is playing the Quicken Loans National for the last time, and so much about this year feels new.

Woods played his first 18hole round at the TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm during the pro-am yesterday, and it didn’t take long to realize why the course rated as the fourth toughest to par last year on the PGA Tour, behind only three majors.

“It’s certainly a lot more difficult than what I had envisioned,” Woods said. “They’ve got the rough up, fairways in. It’s like a miniOpen here.”

Also new: his putter. Woods has been struggling with just about every aspect of putting since March, when he made a charge in the final round at Bay Hill until tying for fifth. He missed the cut at the U.S. Open two weeks ago, and last week in the Bahamas he began tinkering with a new putter. The one he used in nine holes of practice on Tuesday, and in the pro-am, was a mallet variety.

“I’m trying to find something that I can feel again like the swing of the putter, getting my body in the right positions and seeing the lines again,” Woods said. “Once I start to get that ball rolling on my lines, then I’ll be back to putting like I was.”

Woods is the only twotime winner of the National, both times at Congressio­nal a few miles down the road. He hasn’t played the event since 2015 when he was struggling with back issues that eventually led to multiple surgeries and kept him out of golf for the better part of two years.

This is the final edition of a tournament that began in 2007 with high hopes, with Woods as the tournament host at Congressio­nal, held around the Fourth of July with a theme built around saluting the military.

“The support has been fantastic. We just haven’t got the sponsorshi­p dollars,” Woods said.

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