Rome News-Tribune

Kuchar shoots 64 at Riviera; Woods loses strong start

- By Doug Ferguson

Tiger Woods began with an unknowing tribute to Kobe Bryant by making an eagle putt that optical cameras measured at 24 feet, 8 inches.

He ended his opening round with a reminder that getting around Riviera unscathed is no small task.

That’s what made Matt Kuchar’s day all the more remarkable.

Kuchar drove to the edge of the 10th green and twoputted for birdie and kept right on rolling until he had a 7-under 64 on Thursday, matching his best score at Riviera and giving him a three-shot lead in the Genesis Invitation­al.

So clean was Kuchar’s round that he only once had to stress over a par putt, and he made the 10-footer at the par-3 fourth.

“I think it’s one of the few courses that has truly stood the test of time,” Kuchar said. “It was a great test of golf 50 years ago when Ben Hogan was playing, it’s a great test today with Tiger Woods and all the young boys playing.”

The conditions were ideal once the morning chill gave way to mild sunshine, and Kuchar took advantage in the morning. As much as Kuchar loves the course, he has only one top 10 in his 13 previous appearance­s.

Woods was 4 under through eight holes and had to settle for a 69.

His record at Riviera is under far greater scrutiny, especially this week as he tries for his 83rd PGA Tour victory to set the career mark he now shares with Sam Snead.

LOS ANGELES —

Matt Kuchar tees off on the fourth hole during the first round of the Genesis Invitation­al on Thursday. Kuchar shot 64 to take a three-shot lead at Riviera.

MLB|ASTROS

Woods has not won in 10 appearance­s as a pro, two others as a teenage amateur.

This one held promise, especially after he drilled an 8-iron into the par-5 opening hole and made the eagle putt. The death of Bryant on Jan. 26 is still raw in Los Angeles, and the tour dedicated No. 8 — Bryant wore Nos. 8 and 24 during his 20 years with the Lakers — with a purple-andgold tee sign. Woods made birdie there, his last one of the round.

“Ironic having those two numbers,” Woods said of the length of his eagle putt. “And then No. 8, happened to hit one in there close and had a nice little kick-in there for birdie.”

Brooks Koepka had Nike design some purple-and-gold Mamba golf shoes last October because Bryant inspired him during his return from injury. Koepka called the shoe company after hearing of Bryant’s death in a helicopter crash and suggested something be done, oblivious that he had requested the shoes months earlier. He opened with a 69.

Justin Thomas, who auctioned off Kobe-themed sand wedges he used in the Phoenix Open, had Footjoys of purple-and-gold. They didn’t help him much on this day. He opened with a 74 and was in danger of missing the cut for the second time this year.

Woods seemed bent on having his say at Riviera with the eagle and two more birdies through eight holes, leaving him three off the lead and the back nine to play. But he couldn’t keep his swing together, and it eventually caught up with him.

Right from the opening tip, Chris Mack fretted that his team just wasn’t ready to play.

His guys were lethargic. They didn’t seem to have any passion. There was no sense of urgency.

When the final horn sounded, the Louisville coach’s worst fears were realized.

Trailing all the way and downright awful offensivel­y, the No. 5 Cardinals were dealt a stunning 64-58 loss by Georgia Tech on Wednesday night, snapping their 10-game winning streak.

“It was an ugly game, a muddy game,” Mack said. “We were not dirty enough to win.”

Louisville (21-4, 12-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) lost for the first time since early January with a 40-minute display of airballs and clunkers that allowed the Yellow Jackets (12-13, 6-8) to hang on at the end.

The Cardinals hit just 19 of 56 shots (33.9%) from the field — including a 3-of-24 brickfest beyond the 3-point arc.

“The first four minutes, we looked like zombies,” Mack said. “We didn’t have the readiness or toughness or excitement to play. From that point on, we were battling uphill the whole game.”

It was an especially brutal night for Jordan Nwora, the ACC’S leading scorer at 19.5 points per game. Unable to crack Georgia Tech’s man-to-man defense, he was held to a season-low two points.

Nwora missed all four of his 3-point attempts, capped off by a desperatio­n heave that didn’t hit anything with the clock winding down.

Give credit to Jose Alvarado, who not only led Georgia Tech with 18 points but did a stellar defensive job on Nwora.

“I knew coming in that I was going to be guarding a big-time player,” Alvarado said. “I just gave it all I’ve got on defense.”

ATLANTA —

 ?? AP - Ryan Kang ??
AP - Ryan Kang

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States