Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Matsuyama finishes first round with flourish

-

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – One of the toughest tests of the year made it clear that par would be a great score at Olympia Fields. Leave it to Hideki Matsuyama to make a 65-foot birdie putt on his final hole Thursday to lead the BMW Championsh­ip.

Matsuyama, the Japanese player who has gone three years since his last victory, birdied two of his last three holes for a 3-under 67, one of only three rounds under par on a course that was long, tough, firm, fast and nothing like the last two weeks.

Tyler Duncan, just outside the top 30 as he tries to earn his first trip to the Tour Championsh­ip, made an 8-foot par putt on his last hole for a 68. Mackenzie Hughes, one of only four players who reached 3 under at any point in his round, was another shot behind.

“I'm not sure really what I had going today, but that last putt, the long putt that went in, very happy with that one,” Matsuyama said. “So we'll remember that one.”

Dustin Johnson, who won The Northern Trust last week at 30-under par, opened with a 71 and felt like it was a good day's work. He was told that even three straight rounds of 60 would not be enough to reach 30 under at Olympia Fields.

“Yeah, but I would win,” he said. By a landslide, no doubt.

Tiger Woods needs to finish around fourth to have any hope of returning to East Lake next week in Atlanta to chase the $15 million bonus for the FedEx Cup winner. He was hovering around even par a few shots out of the lead. He finished with three straight bogeys for a 73 and was running hotter than the weather.

A three-time U.S. Open champion, Woods knows all about control and patience and key pars putts. And then he let a reasonable round get away from him.

“The course was fine. The course is in perfect shape. Not the way I wanted to finish,” Woods said in brief comments.

The average score was 72.8, and only four of the 18 holes played under par. That included both par 5s. This is what the U.S. Open could have used in 2003, instead of rain-softened conditions. It was hot in the morning, baking out a dry course. The rough is 5 inches in spots. The greens were hard, making it tough to get the ball close and nearly impossible to get shots to stop on the green from out of the rough.

“I think when golf courses become like this and pars are a premium, I think I'm almost more comfortabl­e at times because you don't feel like you'll ever get left behind when you're running off a few pars in a row,” Hughes said. “Like last week, if you got off to a slow start and you were even par through six holes you felt like you were getting run over.”

Rory McIlroy was among 10 players who finished at 70 and felt the day was a success. He hasn't registered a top 10 since golf returned from the coronaviru­s shutdown in June.

“I said last week if you need someone to shoot between like even par and 2 under, I'm your man,” McIlroy said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Hideki Matsuyama of Japan watches his drive from the second tee during the first round of the BMW Championsh­ip.
GETTY IMAGES Hideki Matsuyama of Japan watches his drive from the second tee during the first round of the BMW Championsh­ip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States