Injury-nagged Tiger Woods fired a par 72 at Lake Nona on Tuesday in the second and final round of the Tavistock Cup exhibition event, as his Albany team stumbled to a last-place finish.
Nine days after walking off in the last round of a World Golf Championships event at Doral with a strained left Achilles tendon, Woods made two birdies on the front nine and two bogeys on the back nine playing in the final foursome.
Woods birdied the par-five second and the par-three fourth and took bogeys at the par-five 11th and par-three 13th in his first stroke-play round since the injury. He had played in a better-ball format with England’s Justin Rose on Monday.
Photo: Reuters
Only one player among the 24 in the field, Albany teammate Luke Donald of England, had a worse round than Woods, shooting a 76.
Host Lake Nona won the US$2.15 million event featuring four teams of top PGA talent with a 41-under par total score, two strokes ahead of Isleworth with Queenwood third on 31-under and last year’s champions Albany last on 26-under.
Health fears abounded over Woods, a 14-time major champion chasing the all-time record 18 majors won by Jack Nicklaus, when he walked off at Doral after hitting his tee shot on the 12th hole.
However, Woods rested his leg and received medical treatment and said last week he would play in the Tavistock event, the US PGA Arnold Palmer Invitational that begins at Bay Hill today and at the Masters, which starts on April 5.
Former World No. 1 Woods has won six titles at Bay Hill in his career. He will tee off on today alongside US compatriot Hunter Mahan and Ernie Els, a three-time major winner who needs a victory to qualify for the Masters.
Els shared low-round honors on Tuesday at the Tavistock event on five-under 67 along with compatriot Retief Goosen, Australian Robert Allenby, England’s Ross Fisher and Denmark’s Thomas Bjorn.
Last year, Achilles and knee injuries at the Masters kept Woods sidelined for almost four months, keeping him from playing in the US and British Opens.
Woods, ranked 18th in the world, has not won any tour-sanctioned event since the 2009 Australian Masters, just before the start of his infamous sex scandal, and has not won a major crown since limping through a playoff to capture the 2008 US Open.
However, Woods has been in solid recent form. He won the World Golf Challenge charity event he hosts in December last year, shared third at Abu Dhabi to open this season and shared second at the Honda Classic earlier this month after shooting a 62 on Sunday, the best final round of his career.
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