Woods upbeat despite sitting six back at Augusta

AUGUSTA, (Reuters) – Tiger Woods, straining to  remain upbeat as he struggles to regain form, said he was  pleased after posting a 71 that put him six strokes off the  pace after yesterday’s opening round of the Masters.

“I’m right there in the ball game,” said former world  number one Woods, who has gone nearly 17 months without a win  and is trying to get the hang of a new golf swing. “I’m only  six back and we got a lot of golf ahead of us.”

Leading the 99-man field was 21-year-old Rory McIlroy of  Northern Ireland, who fired a seven-under-par 65 on a perfect  spring day at Augusta National.

The enormous gallery following Woods, which included his  mother, Kultida, had few chances to erupt in approval for the  four-times champion.

Tiger Woods

Woods sank a bomb of a birdie putt at the 14th to cap three  strong holes of highlights for the 35-year-old American, who  insisted he was on the brink of finding his touch.    “I hit a lot of beautiful putts, a lot of beautiful putts,”  Woods said. “And they were just skirting the edge, so hopefully  they will start going in.”

As disappointing as Woods has been during the longest  victory drought of his career, Augusta National could be the  tonic for a revival. A year ago, Woods tied for fourth in an impressive return  at Augusta after competing for the first time in nearly five  months following the shocking unraveling of his private life.  In 15 PGA Tour starts since, he failed to finish any higher.

Struggles finding the fairway kept Woods from getting off  to a good start as he parred both par-fives after driving into  bunkers.

Two poor putts put Woods in a bind with back-to-back bogeys  from the 10th. “A complete misread and bad speed,” was how he  described his par-putt at the 10th. On the next hole, he  admitted: “I just pulled it. Pulled it. Bad putt.”

Woods made amends by rolling in a testy, 12-foot downhill  par-saving putt at the 12th that stopped the slide and saved  him from making three bogeys in a row for the first time as a  professional at the Masters dating back to 1997. Never the most accurate driver of the golf ball, Woods’s  return to the heights will likely be pegged to the reappearance  of his magical short game and putting stroke.

“Most of the putts looked like they should have gone in,”  said Woods, who made a beeline for the driving range after the  round. “I felt really good over the putts today and I hit a lot  of good ones.
“I would rather be where Rory’s at,” he admitted. “But,  hey, it’s a long way to go. We have a long grind ahead of us.”