USA TODAY US Edition

Pro golfers hit the course

Olson leads CME; Howell leads RMS

- Greg Hardwig

Two of the biggest stars on the LPGA tour decided to go back in order to go forward Thursday.

It worked for both Brittany Lincicome and Lexi Thompson in the first round of the CME Group Tour Championsh­ip at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort.

Lincicome, 33, took her mind-set back to when she was 10 and just started playing the game. She birdied her first five holes on the way to an 8-under-par

64, one shot behind leader Amy Olson and tied with Japan’s Nasa Hataoka, who grabbed the projected lead in the

$1 million Race to the CME Globe with a round capped by a 40-foot birdie putt. Thompson, 23, scrapped her ball-flight philosophy, putter and caddie, and is in fourth at 7 under.

Lincicome got in her way-back machine after a 9-year-old rode along with her in an event earlier in the week and watching a high school freshman — Lake Mary’s Karoline Tuttle — who has committed to Florida play with her in the pro-am Tuesday and Wednesday.

“It’s just funny how they play,” Lincicome said. “They play carefree. There is no stress. They’re not worried about money or rankings or anything. I really just wanted to go back to my 10-year-old self, and I think I accomplish­ed that.”

Thompson, who capped last year in Naples by missing a short putt that could’ve won the event but still winning the $1 million Race to the CME Globe, is starting over in a lot of ways after a rocky season by her standards.

Thompson is winless, and that would be the first time since 2013. Thompson and caddie Kevin McAlpine have split — her brother Curtis is on the bag this week — she has gone back to a draw that she played with early in her career, and has a new putter — a Bettinardi style she has used before — and a new puppy.

Thompson had five birdies and an eagle — she hit a 4-iron from 220 yards to 12 feet — with three consecutiv­e birdies on the back on Nos. 12-14.

“It was nice to have a day like this,” said Thompson, who had her father as her caddie until her brother failed to Monday qualify for this week’s PGA Tour event. “I knew my game was there. It was just a matter of everything coming together and being 100 percent confident with my little swing changes that I’ve been working on.

“I just felt a lot more comfortabl­e. I’ve been working on a few swing changes, so just getting more consistent with it. I worked on it a lot this last week at home. It’s just being confident with it, aiming right, hitting my draw, and just playing how I used to play.”

Earlier this year, Thompson revealed she has been going through some selfconfid­ence body image issues in a post on her Instagram account.

“What I’ve learned is that I’m not going to deprive myself in the one life I get to live, I’m going to enjoy life and my food,” the post read in part. “You should never compare your body to others it’s a never ending battle of being miserable trust me. Your body is your body, it is beautiful so embrace it.”

Thompson said she is making strides in that part of her life.

“It’s definitely a process,” she said. “I’ve been working on myself a lot with just going to therapists or just trying to figure myself out off the golf course, but I’m not just the golfer Lexi. That’s what I want people to know, and not expect so much out of me.”

 ?? AMY OLSON BY MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES ??
AMY OLSON BY MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES

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