Houston Chronicle Sunday

Hoffman builds 5-stroke lead as Woods falters

- By Doug Ferguson

NASSAU, Bahamas — Tiger Woods fell behind early and never recovered. Charley Hoffman pulled away late and made himself hard to beat.

Hoffman handled the blustery conditions Saturday in the Hero World Challenge for a 2-underpar 70 — one of only five rounds under par — and built a five-stroke lead going into the final round at Albany Golf Club.

Woods went 11 consecutiv­e holes without hitting a green in regulation. He went 14 holes until making his first birdie. He had to settle for a 75, leaving him 10 shots out of the lead and finding consolatio­n in the way he feels and the way he fought to keep it from getting worse.

“It’s nice to be part of the fight again,” Woods said. “Fighting against the golf course, fighting against the guys, that’s fun. I just haven’t done it a whole lot in the last few years.”

The strong wind took the air out of any hopes that Woods, playing for the first time in 10 months after a fourth back surgery, might even get into contention in his celebrated return. He opened with rounds of 6968. Those two rounds were enough for his odds of winning the Masters to plunge to 15-1 — the same as Rickie Fowler and Jon Rahm. And then a warm afternoon brought a cold dash of reality.

Woods opened with four bogeys in seven holes. He played four par 5s without having a birdie putt on any of them. And when he finally made a birdie, Woods removed his cap to acknowledg­e the crowd and held up a finger to indicate his first birdie.

“It’s ridiculous it took me 14 holes to make a birdie,” Woods said. “At that time, I’d already played four par 5s and nothing happened. Just one of those days. Anything I did right ended up in a bad spot, and then everything I did wrong, it was really bad.”

It was tough on everyone. No one in the 18-man field broke 70.

Hoffman had a few nervous moments but paid for it only once. He send his tee shot far right into the bushes on a sand dune right of the 10th fairway. He took a penalty drop onto a sandy path and wound up with a double bogey that brought a half-dozen players back into the mix. But not for long. Hoffman closed with three birdies over his last five holes, including the 18th hole for the second consecutiv­e day. That put him at 14-under 202.

Justin Rose, an Albany resident, had a 71 and joined British Open champion Jordan Spieth (72) at 9-under 207.

“I got lucky on some tee balls that didn’t find the bushes and stayed in the sandy areas and I was able to sort of scrap it around,” Hoffman said.

Woods was under pressure early. In his previous two rounds, he was under par early in the round. This one started with a tee shot into the waste area, an approach the wind knocked down short of the green and a chip that was too strong, running 10 feet by and leading to a bogey.

Even his good shots did not work out for him. Woods blistered a 3-wood from 278 yards into the wind and saw it run through the green into a tough lie. His chip didn’t reach the green. His next chip ran 6 feet by the hole, and he missed the par putt.

He bogeyed the next par 5 when he didn’t play for a flyer out of the rough, went well long and was left in such a tough spot that he played away from the flag and his pitch went through the green to the fringe.

He already was 5 over for his round through 10 holes, and he did well not to drop any more shots until he made a pair of birdies late.

Even after a 75, Woods still managed to look at the big picture. He was hitting the ball well, his back felt strong and he at least feels as though he can contend.

“I think overall, I’m very happy with what’s going on this week,” Woods said. “There were a lot of questions that I had — I’m sure you guys have had — and I feel like I’ve come out on a good side.”

 ??  ?? Charley Hoffman birdied three of his last five holes Saturday.
Charley Hoffman birdied three of his last five holes Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States