Tiger Woods putted for birdie on every hole but the last one. He birdied all the par 5s. And the one time he took on one of the short par 4s at Kingston Heath, he came within inches of the green.
It was just the kind of performance a huge crowd at the Australian Masters expected to see.
Despite a bogey on his final hole when he hit into a tea tree, he put together a stress-free round of 6-under 66 yesterday to share the first-day lead with James Nitties and Branden Grace.
"I bogeyed the last hole and missed two short putts for birdie," Woods said. "Other than that, it was a pretty good day."
It felt like more than that to the kind of gallery typically seen only at major championships. Tournament officials said 21,356 people came through the turnstiles, with about 5,000 others giving Kingston Heath a buzz it hasn't had in years.
"It was like when I first turned pro and (Greg) Norman used to play," said Cameron Percy, at 67. "It was like a major, basically."
Nitties, who easily retained his U.S. PGA Tour card in his rookie season, played behind Woods and quietly joined him in the lead with two birdies over his last three holes.
Grace, a 21-year-old from South Africa, made his first tournament round in Melbourne a memorable one by running off four straight birdies at the turn. He had the lead to himself until a bogey on the 17th.
"I'm up there, and hopefully I can keep playing that way for the next three rounds," he said.
Woods missed only two fairways in a round that was relatively free of trouble until he pulled his tee shot on the ninth hole, had to chip out of the tea tree into thick rough, did well to bounce it on the green and took two putts from 40 feet. He chose to lay back from the bunkers on several of the short holes, although birdie chances didn't come by the bushel. He hit away from the flags when he didn't have the right angles; other times, he simply hit poor shots.
He made his move toward the end of the round, hitting a 3-wood to the 294-yard sixth hole that held its line to the left of the bunkers and came up short of the green, leaving an easy chip to 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 seven feet on No. 8.
Far more impressive than the golf, however, was the gallery.
Traffic was backed up along Kingston Road outside the club for miles in the hour before Woods teed off. "I know," he said. "I was stuck in it, too."
The tournament has been sold out for months, and it's odd 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 -- not all of them come through the front gate -- and while it was impossible for some 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 golfers such as Seve Benson, playing in the group ahead of Woods, feeling like a rock star.
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