New York Post

Block, 11-over, last of 120 at Colonial

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Michael Block had a near ace and managed to save par from a bridge but ultimately endured a miserable start to the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas, on Thursday in his first start since taking the PGA Championsh­ip by storm last week.

Block, the 46-year-old clubhouse profession­al who finished in a share of 15th at the year’s second major, struggled to an 11-over-par 81 at Colonial Country Club that left him dead last in the 120-player field and 19 shots back of leader Harry Hall.

“It is what it is. I’m going to live with it. I thought it was going to happen that third or fourth round last week at Oak Hill, and it never happened. It happened now, and I wasn’t surprised by it, to tell you the truth,” said Block.

“The experience I had that last week was next level. So today, coming out here and not having my game at all and having a lot of bad luck or whatever you might call it, just call it golf.”

Block, who teaches golf at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California, received a sponsor’s exemption to Colonial after his PGA Championsh­ip performanc­e but was unable to conjure up any of that Oak Hill magic on a layout he had not seen until this week.

He began the day with three consecutiv­e bogeys before making birdie from 4 feet at the par-three fourth where his ball rolled just past the hole. Block made bogey at the fifth before a birdie at the ninth to reach the turn at two over.

After a wayward tee shot at the 10th, Block hit his approach from a bridge and impressive­ly launched a crisp shot that sailed through trees and landed just short of the green from where he managed to save par.

Block followed that with three consecutiv­e bogeys and then carded back-toback double-bogeys starting at the par-four 15th where he found a fairway bunker with his tee shot and then hit out of one greenside bunker and into another.

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