Tiger Fights Through Tough Saturday at HWC



 

Most people expected a hiccup at some point during Tiger Woods’ return to competitive golf this week and on Saturday, they got it. Playing in blustery conditions at Albany Golf Club, Woods started slow, making bogeys on two of his first three holes.

 

There was some silver lining, however. Woods battled through an opening-nine 40 to birdie two holes on the way in, giving some hope to those looking to see some resiliency out of Woods.  

GolfChannel.com’s Jay Coffin wrapped up Tiger’s round


Tiger Woods finally looked like a player who hadn’t played a competitive round of golf in 301 days.

That was not the case over the first two days of the Hero World Challenge when Woods shot stress-free rounds of 69-68 while booming drives and making key putts. None of that happened Saturday during the third round at Albany and the chipping woes continued to frustrate him.

Woods bogeyed four of his first seven holes and shot 3-over 75 to sit in a 10th-place tie at 4 under par, 10 shots behind leader Charley Hoffman. To be fair it was a windy day and there were not many low scores. Only five rounds were under par. Dustin Johnson shot 76, while Henrik Stenson shot 77.

But for Woods, this week remains all about completing 72 holes. Rust was going to rear its ugly head at some point. The third round was that time.

 

“I just couldn’t get it turned around,” he said. “It kept going the wrong way.”

All week Woods has said that one of the biggest adjustments, aside from simply walking during a round of golf again, would be figuring out yardages. He’s worked diligently on this with Rickie Fowler the past few weeks in South Florida.

Woods said he had 278 to the hole on the par-3 fifth hole and hit 3-wood over the back into a stiff breeze. On the drivable par-4 seventh hole, Woods was trying to hit driver 300 yards and carried it over 320, according to him.

“Whatever I did right ended up in a bad spot and whatever I did wrong was really wrong,” Woods said.

Not all was lost. Woods played the back nine under par. He bogeyed the 10th hole and made birdies on Nos. 14 and 17. He grinded, even when he knew he shot himself out of the tournament.

“It’s nice to be part of the fight again,” Woods said. “Get out there and fighting against the golf course, fighting against the guys, that’s fun. I just haven’t done it a whole lot in the last few years.”

Woods’ 4-under par mark is 10 shots behind 54-hole leader Charley Hoffman. Hoffman holds a five-stroke advantage over Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose entering Sunday’s final round. 

Here are the complete third round highlights.

 

[GolfChannel.com]

 

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