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After completing his 67, Stricker said Firestone would provide the perfect preparation for next week's PGA Championship at Hazeltine.
"This is a perfect warmup," he said. "This a similar style to what we're going to be playing next week, an old-style golf course with big trees and narrow fairways. So it's a good test and a good tuneup."
Woods admitted his round was streaky -- a blend of drives pushed far to the right, recovery shots that saved him strokes and the occasional birdie putt.
"Kind of the way it's been this year -- although I've done all right," said Woods, who has won four times this season. "Some of the things that I was working on on Monday and Tuesday at home, I put it together for a little bit in stretches today."
Woods was joined at 68 by Sergio Garcia, Hunter Mahan, Robert Allenby, Miguel Angel Jimenez and Danny Lee.
British Open champ Stewart Cink, winner of the 2004 Bridgestone, shot a 69 to join a dozen others, including U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover.
Phil Mickelson rebounded from a poor start for a 70 in his first competitive round since the U.S. Open. He had taken six weeks off to stay at home while his wife and mother fought breast cancer.
It took time to get back in the groove.
"You get into playing a little bit and you realize that you can't (be) swinging afraid or swinging tentative," he said. "I started to trust my swing. I started to make more aggressive shots and ended up giving myself a few birdie chances and I made them."
That's exactly what Harrington did, too.
[Associated Press;
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