Lodi News-Sentinel

Woods, Fowler jump to share of Tour Championsh­ip lead

- By Steve Hummer

Rickie Fowler was in mid-dissection of his quite-fine 65 on Thursday, when just over his shoulder there came a mighty roar from the 18th green.

You just got company atop the leaderboar­d, young man. Your thoughts? “I don’t know who it was,” he said. Really? You have no clue? “No.” There is no roar quite like a Tiger Woods roar. Perhaps it has been so long that we all have to get used to hearing it again.

Rolling in that sloping 28-foot eagle putt, Woods put the exclamatio­n point on a first-round 65, a share of the early Tour Championsh­ip lead and the surest sign yet that there is golfing life left after you’ve had your spine soldered like a broken fence post.

Quite a storm of fully-met anticipa-

tion brewed this day within the intimate confines of East Lake Golf Club. How rare is that in the sporting marketplac­e when the customers get more than they expected?

It’s a corner of the golfing world Woods hasn’t worked for five years, but it was almost like he had never been away. In fact this first round was a vast improvemen­t over the 73 he posted on Thursday in 2013, his last appearance at East Lake. It was the lowest round he shot here since 2007, when he won the thing.

Wearing a sweat-soaked, peach-colored shirt for the Georgia setting, Woods looked right at home here. Who are we kidding? Every tournament is a home game for this guy — that has only intensifie­d with his comeback from spinal fusion surgery — and it was no different at East Lake.

“I’ve been gone for a while and come back, and I hadn’t played this tournament in five years. And some of the people said they haven’t been out here in five years,” Woods said. “That’s kind of nice that they’re coming out and supporting this event and supporting me, as well.”

The Woods Comeback Tour has been accelerati­ng greatly since his runner-up finish at the PGA Championsh­ip. This is the second straight tournament in which he has bolted out to the first-round lead.

One difference — he considered his Thursday 65 trumping the 62 he fired two weeks ago for the first-round lead of the BMW Championsh­ip.

“This was far better than the 62,” he said. “The conditions were soft (at the BMW). It’s hard to get the ball closer here. If you drive the ball in the rough, you can’t get the ball close here. It puts a premium on driving and puts a premium on allowing for a little bit of chase on some of those greens.”

This was a very low-stress 65. Woods has had more dramatic haircuts. He has faced more difficult decisions ordering dinner.

“I hit so many quality shots all day, whether it was tee to green or it was putts,” he said. “I didn’t really mishit a single shot today.” Woods hit 10 of 14 fairways (third in the field), and 14 of 18 greens in regulation.

He also had one of the only three eagles for the day, with that tumultuous putt on No. 18, after snuggling a 5wood inside 30 feet. “It took forever for that putt to start breaking — the grain coming down off the left. But once it snagged it, it was going straight right.” Ah, Tiger Woods speaking his singular golf jargon again.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Rickie Fowler tees off on the 18th hole on his way to a birdie to finish at 5-under par during the first round of the Tour Championsh­ip on Thursday.
CURTIS COMPTON/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Rickie Fowler tees off on the 18th hole on his way to a birdie to finish at 5-under par during the first round of the Tour Championsh­ip on Thursday.

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