The Palm Beach Post

Woods curious how Carnoustie will play

Links-style course will rely on irons and skill rather than drive.

- By Doug Ferguson

CARNOUSTIE, SCOTLAND — Tiger Woods doesn’t feel as old at the oldest championsh­ip in golf.

Back at the British Open for the first time in three years, Woods broke from his tradition on Tuesday morning. Instead of being among the first on the tee for practice, he didn’t show up at Carnoustie until his news conference just before lunch. Then, he played nine holes with Masters champion Patrick Reed and Bryson DeChambeau.

This was not a case of a 42-yearold needing his rest.

Entering the year having not

played any major since the end of 2015 and the start of three back surgeries, Woods has been feeling better as 2018 has gone on. And there’s something about links golf that inspires him.

“It’s my favorite type of golf to play,” Woods said.

He made his links debut at Carnoustie in 1995 as an amateur at the Scottish Open, a week before his British Open debut at St. Andrews. He hasn’t contended on the back nine in the previous Opens at Carnoustie, in 1999 and 2007, though he wasn’t far from a playoff. Might this be his best shot at winning another major?

“Not to be smart, but it is the next major I’m playing,” Woods said with a laugh.

But over time, he thinks it might be his best chance because of history. Woods recalls 53-year-old Greg Norman play i ng in the final group at Royal Birkdale in 2008, a major Woods missed because of knee surgery. The following year, Woods missed the cut for the first time at the British Open when 59-year-old Tom Watson was one putt away from winning at Turnberry.

“You don’t have to be long to play on a links-style golf course,” Woods said. “You get to places like Augusta National, where it’s just a big ballpark, and the golf course outgrows you, unfortunat­ely. That’s just the way it goes. But a links-style golf course, you can roll the ball. Distance becomes a moot point.”

That said, distance is everything at Carnoustie this year, which Woods discovered when he arrived Sunday. How far the ball travels in the warm, dry air is not the issue. It’s how far it travels once it gets on the baked turf.

The conditions are as brittle as Muirfield in 2013, though most comparison­s are with Hoylake in 2006, when Woods won the Open for the second straight time by hitting driver only one time all week.

“There’s not a lot of opportunit­ies to hit the driver just because the ball is going to be rolling 80 yards,” Woods said. “It’s just hard to keep the ball in play. Even hitting sometimes 4- and 5-irons, they’ve been running 50, 60 yards. It’s going to be an interestin­g test to see which clubs we’re going to be using off the tees, and a lot of it is dependent on which way the wind blows.”

Woods had a 2-iron built for him specifical­ly for the British Open, and he wonders how much he’ll even use it. That has been too much club off the tee. Instead, most of his shots are with a 3-iron or 4-iron.

Reed was familiar with conditions the year Woods won at Hoylake, even though he was only 15. Reed won the Junior British Open that summer at Heswall, not far from Royal Liverpool. It was not only dry but extremely hot, and Reed was in rain pants because he didn’t like wearing shorts.

“I’ll never forget hitting the first tee shot and being as young as I was, getting up there, and it was 308,” Reed said. “And I was just like, ‘Wow, I just hit a drive over 300 yards.’ And now I’m hitting 2-irons over 360.”

 ?? HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES ?? Tiger Woods says the creativity required at firm, fast links layouts such as Carnoustie makes it “my favorite type of golf to play.”
HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES Tiger Woods says the creativity required at firm, fast links layouts such as Carnoustie makes it “my favorite type of golf to play.”

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