Tiger Woods launched his latest tilt at Sam Snead’s record for US PGA Tour victories with a two-under-par 70 Thursday that left him five off the pace set by Ryan Moore at the Memorial Tournament.
Former world number one Woods, playing for the first time since missing the cut at the PGA Championship, made birdies at two of his three closing holes to stay within shouting distance of Moore, who carded a seven-under 65.
The 43-year-old Woods, a five-time winner at Memorial, could equal Snead’s record of 82 PGA Tour wins with a victory this week at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio.
The 15-time major winner, who crowned his comeback from a nearly two-year injury layoff by winning the Masters in April, looked comfortable throughout Thursday’s first round.
After teeing off on the back nine, Woods made a fast start with a birdie on the par-5 11th hole, drilling his third shot to eight feet and then draining the putt.
A bogey checked his progress on his fourth hole of the round, the 13th, before a run of nine straight pars.
A birdie followed by a bogey on the fifth and sixth holes threatened to leave Woods at level par for the day, before he birdied seven and eight.
A smiling Woods was satisfied with his round, although he said he could have made better use of the soft conditions.
“It was one of those days where it could have easily flipped,” Woods said. “I feel like I could have got a few more out of it. It’s so soft out there. It’s definitely gettable.
“And if you look at some of the scores today, the guys are doing it.”
Moore, a native of the rainy Pacific Northwest, said the rain softened course suited him.
The 36-year-old cut loose with a dazzling display over the front nine of his round, reeling off four consecutive birdies to reach the turn at five under. Two more birdies and seven pars down the stretch completed the world number 79s best round ever at Muirfield.
Moore, who claimed the most recent of his five tour titles in 2016, said putting consistency was the key to his stellar round.
He made 16 of 16 putts inside the 10-feet range on Thursday, including a birdie putt at the par-3 fourth that lipped all the way around the cup before dropping in.
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a ball go that far around the hole and go in,” Moore said.
“In the five to eight-foot range, they seemed to be lipping out (this season), and today they lipped in. It’s always nice to get that stuff going and get the momentum and keep the momentum, just makes you feel better.” (Agence France-Presse)