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The size of the gallery for the Wednesday pro-am was not as large as expected because of a severe storm that blew through Indianapolis, chasing fans back to their cars and dumping even more rain on a course that really didn't need it.
No course is too long for these guys, and the soft, pure greens should mean low scoring.
"You can be pretty aggressive," Woods said. "I think the guys will be firing at a lot of flags this week."
They should be used to that by now. After an opening playoff event at Bethpage Black, they went after the TPC Boston last week. McIlroy won at 20-under 264 to beat Louis Oosthuizen, while Woods was third, making a birdie on the last hole for a 66 to finish two shots behind at 266.
For Woods, it was the 12th time in his career that he shot all four rounds in the 60s without winning, and the first time since Dubai Desert Classic in 2007. The only other time he had a lower score than that without winning was at Disney -- twice -- at 265.
"It was advantageous to hit the ball a long way," Woods said after playing 16 holes in the pro-am before rain interrupted. "But you've got to hit the fairway. If you do hit the ball in the fairway, driving it out there, you can attack a lot of these flags. A lot of these corners don't really come into play with it being this soft. The ball is just going to hit and plug."
Anytime a player says "soft," that usually means low scoring. Woods did not disagree.
"But we've never played here," he said. "With that said, guys will start getting a feel for it, and I'm sure you'll see some low scores. But then I think the guys will start going lower and lower."
What matters this week is getting higher and higher -- at least in the FedEx Cup.
The top 30 from the 70-man field advance to the Tour Championship, a reward in itself because that comes with an exemption into the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open (and with rare exception, the PGA Championship). Then, everyone in the field at East Lake has a crack at the $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup.
The top five players going into this week are McIlroy, Watney, Woods, Brandt Snedeker and Oosthuizen. The idea is to stay in the top five, for those are the players who would be assured the $10 million by winning the Tour Championship no matter what anyone else does.
[Associated
Press;
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