|
Singh & Waldorf lead
by one
 |
|
Arnold Palmer playing
from a bunker at the 15th - On the way to an 82. Allsport.
|
Tiger Woods is back on tour,
along with a strong cast of stars in the Bay Hill Invitational. It's the kind
of field that makes Vijay Singh want to take his game up a notch, which is exactly
what he did today.
Singh made bogeys from
bunkers on the first two holes, but kept his patience on a blustery day at Bay
Hill and shot a 4-under-par 68 to share the lead with Duffy Waldorf.
Woods, coming off a two-week
break, began his march to The Masters with a routine 69. He was joined by six
others, including Honda Classic winner Dudley Hart and one-hit wonder Mike Nicolette,
who won Bay Hill in 1983, quit the tour five years later, and now helps design
clubs for Ping Golf.
"Before the tournament
starts, we kind of look around and know who's playing," Singh said of a field
that includes six of the top seven players in the Official
World Golf Ranking. "It makes you fight a little bit harder out there."
Once the round began, Singh
was concerned only with his own game. And there were plenty of concerns.
It took him four shots
to reach the first green and he had to make a 4-footer for bogey. He dumped his
tee shot on the par-3 second hole into a front bunker to drop another shot.
Singh admits his biggest
problem is losing hope too early in a round. Just last month, he was within striking
distance of the lead at Pebble Beach and "gave up a little bit" after a bogey
on the par-5 14th.
He then watched Matt Gogel
shoot 40 on the back nine and Woods zoom past everyone for his sixth straight
tour victory.
"That's the way it's been
for the last year," Singh said. "I get frustrated very early and make a mistake,
but I'm kind of changing the attitude a little bit and trying not to let mistakes
bother me."
Among the 14 players at
70 were Phil Mickelson, who was 5-under over his last seven holes, and Mark O'Meara.
Casey Martin made double
bogey on his final hole for a 74, while the kids -- 18-year-old amateur Aaron
Baddeley of Australia and 20-year-old Sergio Garcia -- each had 75.
Singh was beaten in the
first round of the Andersen Consulting Match Play Championship by Waldorf, who
is quietly developing into a consistent contender. Waldorf was among seven players
who won twice on the PGA Tour last year.
"The wins kind of boost
your confidence," Waldorf said. "But I think there are times where you have to
go out and be confident even if you're not making the putts or playing as well
as you think you should. That's the only way you're going to get to the place
where you want to be, which is contending and winning tournaments."
That's never been a problem
for Woods, who hasn't finished worse than 18th in a stroke-play event since he
tied for 56th at Bay Hill last year.
Woods looks refreshed after
his short break and showed no signs of rust. Facing trouble on his opening hole,
he hit a flop shot from thick rough on No. 10 to within an inch of the cup to
save par, and got around with only a few glitches after that.
He birdied all of the par-5s
and had eagle putts on three of them. His other two birdies came on the par-4
15th and par-3 17th.
"I really didn't get myself
in a lot of trouble today," Woods said. The lone exception was a 3-wood he sprayed
into the trees on 18, forcing him to pitch back to the fairway en route to one
of his three bogeys on the day.
It was only the third time
in 13 rounds as a professional that Woods shot in the 60s at Bay Hill. A 69 was
not a bad score in tricky crosswinds that began in the morning and never let
up.
"Anything under par is
pretty good," Woods said.
With Woods, anything near
the lead is not too bad, either.
DIVOTS: John Daly
wasn't planning on playing Bay Hill until he tied for 16th last week in the Honda
Classic, his best finish in more than a year. "Besides, I always play this course
well -- except for one hole," he said. That would be the par-5 sixth, where Daly
took an 18 two years ago. He made par there Thursday in a round of 72. ... Arnold
Palmer considered not playing his tournament at the start of the year, but the
Bay Hill organizers talked him into it. "I just hope I can play better than I
have in recent years," he said. He shot an 82, his worst score at Bay Hill since
an 83 in 1989. ... One woman in the gallery had a sign taped to her backpack
that read, "We miss you Payne." Payne Stewart was the 1987 champion and used
to live at Bay Hill. ... Earlier this year, Olin Browne said he could go head-to-head
with Tiger Woods provided he played from the red tees. Sure enough, Woods was
55 yards longer off the tee on the par-5 12th hole.
Email this page to a friend | Return
to top of page
|