The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Woods raises expectatio­ns

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MIAMI. - Tiger Woods’ expectatio­ns have “gone up” after his 12th placing at the Honda Classic golf tournament in Florida on Sunday.

Though a double-bogey at the 15th ended any outside chance of victory at PGA National, Woods took confidence from his performanc­e in just his third official start since undergoing a spinal fusion last April.

An apparently healthy Woods seems increasing­ly likely to head to April’s Masters, the first major of 2018, as a contender, rather than just one of the players invited back as a former champion.

“I feel like each time out I’ve gotten better and I’ve gotten more of a feel for playing tournament golf,“he told reporters. ”The last couple days, it felt easy to play tournament golf.

“The warm up felt good. I get into the flow of the round. I could find the rhythm of the rounds faster. The more golf I‘m playing tournament-wise, the faster I‘m able to click into the feel of the round.

“I feel very happy the way I played the entire week.”

Woods shot 70 on Sunday to finish at even-par 280, eight strokes behind winner Justin Thomas.

Four weeks ago, Woods was equal 23rd in his official comeback at Torrey Pines, while he missed the cut last week at Riviera, where one bad round of 76 cost him. It is his only score of more than 72 in 10 rounds this year.

“I‘m just building towards April,” Woods said. “I‘m trying to get myself ready for that and I feel like I‘m right on track for that.”

Despite the positive signs, Woods demurred when asked if he felt like the ‘old Tiger’. “I feel like an older guy,” he said. “My new reality, my back’s fused and I can’t create the same shots I used to be able to create. I can hit the same shots but I just have to do it in a different way.

“I didn’t really know what to expect. My expectatio­ns have gone up.”

American golfer Thomas rolled in a birdie on the first hole of a playoff to out-duel third round leader Luke List and win the PGA Tour’s Honda Classic on Sunday.

The 24-year-old Thomas posted his eighth win on the PGA Tour and his seventh victory in his last 31 tournament­s. “It was another level of difficulty, not only the amount of people I was trying to beat, but this golf course,” said Thomas.

“I am so proud of myself and how I played. When you get out of position you have to try to salvage par and that’s what I did.

“I just stayed patient. I know what to expect, how tough it can be, and it feels good to come out on top.” Reuters.

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