The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Poulter, Hubbard (-7) set pace; Spieth rallies after early triple

- By Doug Ferguson

Ian Poulter and Mark Hubbard set the pace for good scoring through a brief spell of rain at Hilton Head.

Jordan Spieth was pleasantly surprised to join the chase Thursday in the RBC Heritage.

Poulter holed a 30-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole and finished with a 5-iron to 4 feet for another birdie that capped a 7-under 64, a round without a bogey but not without flaws. Hubbard kept his 64 together with two par putts at the end.

They had a one-shot lead over Viktor Hovland, Sebastian Munoz, Webb Simpson, Dylan Frittelli, Brice Garnett, Ryan Palmer and Michael Thompson after the first round.

Spieth didn’t figure to be part of the conversati­on until bouncing back from a triple bogey with eight birdies for a 66.

Three holes into the tournament, Spieth stood under a cluster of trees just off the 12th fairway, looking some 20 yards to the right at his golf ball nestled in pine straw a few feet beyond the white outof-bounds stakes. He tried to figure out which tree it hit, not that it mattered. And then he threeputte­d from 25 feet for a triple bogey.

It was the kind of break Spieth has seen far too often during three years without a victory.

“All of a sudden, I’m 3 over through three, and you start to see guys going 2 under through two, 2 under through three early. It’s not a great feeling,” Spieth said.

So he told his caddie on the 13th tee, “That’s over. Let’s get four (birdies) today and shoot under par.”

“I ended up getting a few more than that,” Spieth said.

He answered with a birdie on No. 13, and then just like last week’s opening round at Colonial, got hot on his back nine. Spieth had a career-best six consecutiv­e birdies. The stretch started with an 8-foot putt on the par-5 second, and it included a 7-iron to 4 feet to a left pin near the water on the par-3 fourth.

He was on such a roll that Spieth began to contemplat­e eight straight birdies to end his round. But he saw enough mud on his ball from the fairway on No. 8 that he played conservati­vely to 30 feet, and then finished with another short birdie.

It was another positive step, and that triple bogey on his third hole was another opportunit­y to put to use his magic word during his return from a three-month shutdown: grace.

The idea is to not dwell on mistakes that are bound to happen as he keeps making strides, and Spieth worked as much on that with caddie Michael Greller during the break as his swing.

“Michael did a great job of reminding me that today when it wasn’t going well on my front nine,” Spieth said. “It’s definitely a trigger to get it going. The idea ... is to work yourself into contention, get those experience­s, start to feel more and more comfortabl­e under the gun. I mean, that’s the longest I’ve gone without having a chance on a Sunday.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ian Poulter, who shares a one-shot lead with Mark Hubbard after a 64, watches his shot from the 17th tee during the first round Thursday of the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head Island, S.C.
GERRY BROOME / ASSOCIATED PRESS Ian Poulter, who shares a one-shot lead with Mark Hubbard after a 64, watches his shot from the 17th tee during the first round Thursday of the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head Island, S.C.

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