Texarkana Gazette

What a wicked week

Woods makes an early statement at East Lake

- By Doug Ferguson

ATLANTA—In the one week Tiger Woods had away from golf during the FedEx Cup playoffs, Nick Faldo said he had lost his aura, Greg Norman said he was intimidate­d by Rory McIlroy and Johnny Miller claimed that Woods once wanted lessons from him.

“Nice week, huh?” Woods said, grinning.

Even better was to be back on the course Thursday at the Tour Championsh­ip, where Woods had the final word for at least for one day. He kept the ball in play at East Lake, chipped in for one of his six birdies and wound up with a 4-under 66 for a share of the lead with Justin Rose.

It was the first step toward what Woods hopes is a third FedEx Cup title, and another $10 million bonus.

“I probably could have gotten a couple more out of it,” Woods said about his opening round. “But I was probably right on my number.”

McIlroy, playing with Woods for the fifth time in these FedEx Cup playoffs, got up-and-down from short of the par-3 18th hole for a 69. McIlroy is trying to become the first player since Woods in 2006 to win three straight PGA Tour events in the same season, and he wasn’t overly alarmed by his start.

“Wish I could have shot a couple shots better,” McIlroy said. “But I’m in a good position going into tomorrow.”

The week began with Norman saying that Woods was intimidate­d by McIlroy, a suggestion that both play- ers found amusing. While it’s doubtful that inspired Woods, he played as if he wasn’t ready to let McIlroy win a third straight playoff event and capture the FedEx Cup.

McIlroy, who has won three of his last four tournament­s, and Woods

are among the top five seeds at East Lake who only have to win the Tour Championsh­ip to claim the largest payoff in golf. Woods wasn’t interested in what anyone else was doing.

“Just winning,” he said. “Winning takes care of everything.”

Jack Nicklaus even weighed in on Norman’s comments to FoxSports.com. Nicklaus was doing a radio interview with ESPN 980 in Washington when told about Norman’s remarks that McIlroy intimidate­d Woods. Nicklaus said playfully, “Quiet, Greg. Quiet. Down, boy.”

“I think Tiger has a lot of wins left in him,” Nicklaus said. “He does have a lot more competitio­n. During the couple of years when Tiger wasn’t really there, all of a sudden you have Rory McIlroy, Keegan Bradley and I could probably name a half-dozen other guys that have all won and learned how to win in Tiger’s absence. They’re not scared of him anymore.”

Rose, who hasn’t won since the World Golf Championsh­ip at Doral in March, swiftly moved up the leaderboar­d late in his round with three birdies over the last five holes, and the last one was memorable. From the back of the green on the par-3 18th, Rose faced a 50-foot putt with some 20 feet of break from right to left. It looked wide the whole way until it snapped back toward the cup.

Equally impressive was chipping in from some 20 yards short of the 14th green for the birdie that started his big run.

Rose is 24th in the FedEx Cup, meaning he would have to win and everyone at the top of the standings would have to falter. The way Woods started, that looked improbable. Rose checked the leaderboar­d early on, not to see his projected standing, but to get an idea of how the course was playing.

That part was easy to decipher. On a warm day, with the sun finally breaking through cloud cover in the middle of the afternoon, no one was tearing up the place.

“Obviously, I realized it was time to be patient,” Rose said. “No one was really going low ... so I always had that in the back of my mind.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the fifth hole during the first round of the Tour Championsh­ip golf tournament Thursday in Atlanta.
Associated Press Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the fifth hole during the first round of the Tour Championsh­ip golf tournament Thursday in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States