This Article is From Nov 12, 2009

Tiger opens with a 66 in Australia

Tiger opens with a 66 in Australia
Melbourne: Tiger Woods lived up to eight months of anticipation in Australia by running off three straight birdies late in his round of a 6-under 66 that put him atop the leaderboard in the Australian Masters on Thursday.

Playing for the first time Down Under in 11 years, before an enormous gallery only seen at major championships, Woods putted for birdie on every hole until the last one.

He pulled his drive into a tea tree, chopped out into the rough and took two putts from 40 feet for his lone bogey.

Among early starters, Woods shared the lead with James Nitties of Australia, coming off his rookie season on the PGA Tour, and Branden Grace of South Africa.

Woods missed only two fairways in a round that was relatively free of stress.

He hit a driver off the tee five times and, apart for the final hole, kept it in play and away from the trouble.

Woods chose to lay back from the bunkers on several of the short par 4s at Kingston Heath, and a couple of times hit poor shots or played purposely away from the flags.

He made his move toward the end of the round, hitting 3-wood to the 294-yard sixth hole that held its line to the left of the bunkers and came up just short of the green, leaving an easy chip to within a foot.

After a poor tee shot left him a bad angle to the green on the seventh, Woods hit an 8-iron over the corner of trees to 20 feet for another birdie, then hit an 8-iron to 7 feet on the third.

Far more impressive than the golf, however, was the gallery. Traffic was backed up along Kingston Road outside the club for kilometers in the hour before Woods tee off.

"I know," Woods said. "I was stuck in it, too." The tournament has been a sellout for months, and it remains peculiar to see a ticket window at an Australian golf tournament with a sign that says "Sold out." The cap was at 100,000 tickets for the week, and while it was impossible for 25,000 fans to stay on one hole, whoever couldn't fit in moved ahead to the next couple of holes.

That turned into a treat for the likes of England's Seve Benson, playing in the group ahead of Woods, feeling like a rock star himself.

"It was amazing," Benson said after a 70. "After a couple of holes, you get used to it. But then you realize that they were not on the hole before. They had been there for awhile waiting."

It was a little different behind Woods, as marshals allowed the gallery to stop in the middle of crossing areas so that the fans entirely circled every green on which Woods, defending champion Rod Pampling and fellow-Australia Craig Parry were putting.

Parry holed a 50-foot putt on the fourth and shot 70, while Pampling had a 71.

Nitties was among those in the group behind Woods, and he couldn't believe when his group was told they were behind the clock. He said tour officials were more lenient when they realized the players had to wait for fans ahead of them to clear the crossing zones before they could tee off on par 4s.

"If we hit a good drive, we could hit the people," Nitties said. "It was difficult at times, hitting at moving targets. But I thought it would be more of a circus than it was."

Among those in the gallery was Woods' mother, Kultida, who usually only travels to Augusta National and Sherwood Country Club for her son's tournament in December.

Woods, coming off a tie for sixth in Shanghai last week, had few complaints about his round. He twice missed birdie putts inside 8 feet, and spent a large part of his round lag putting.

"My iron game certainly wasn't sharp," he said. "I didn't take on some of the pins. And others were just bad shots."

Cameron Percy of Australia and New Zealand's Doug Holloway were at 67, while Australia's Greg Chalmers was in the group at 68.

Australian Geoff Ogilvy, the only other player besides Woods ranked in the top 50 at Kingston Heath, took double bogey on his final hole for a 72.
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