Englishman Westwood, long regarded as one of the best players in
the game who has yet to clinch a major title, fired a six-under-par
65 on a calm, muggy day at Valhalla Golf Club to finish joint top
with Americans Kevin Chappell and Ryan Palmer.
British Open champion Rory McIlroy, the pre-tournament favourite,
was lurking ominously just one off the pace after opening with an
eight-birdie 66 in the year's final major.
"I played well, hit a lot fairways, putted nicely," former world
number one Westwood told reporters after racking up a total of nine
birdies, one bogey and a double on a challenging 7,458-yard layout
offset by soft and receptive greens.
"I gave myself a lot of chances. All in all, there were no real
weaknesses out there. I hit a lot of quality iron shots, and it felt
like 65 was a fair enough score for the way I played."
Westwood rebounded from a double-bogey at the par-four first, his
10th hole of the day, with birdies at the fourth, sixth, seventh,
eighth and ninth to end his round with a spectacular flourish.
Chappell, who missed the cut on his PGA Championship debut last
year, recorded three birdies on each nine while Palmer briefly got
to seven under for the outright lead before he bogeyed his
penultimate hole, the par-three eighth.
McIlroy, with his game in sparkling order, birdied three of his
first nine holes to reach the turn in three-under 32 before he hit
his second shot at the 10th out-of-bounds en route to a
double-bogey. He then bogeyed the par-three 11th.
However, the Northern Irish world number one responded in
spectacular fashion, reeling off four consecutive birdies from the
12th, before picking up another shot at the par-five last where he
comfortably reached the green in two and two-putted.
"You have to take whatever you are feeling inside and try and turn
it into a positive," McIlroy said of his rocky ride over 10 and 11.
"I was 'hot' and it's (all about) trying to use that fire as a fuel
to propel yourself forward
"I think it just shows where my game is mentally right now, that I
was able to do that today," added the Northern Irishman, who ended
the day level with American Jim Furyk, Italy's Edoardo Molinari,
Swede Henrik Stenson and Englishman Chris Wood.
BACK SCARE
Woods, who pronounced himself pain-free on Wednesday after suffering
a back scare on Sunday that left his participation in some doubt,
struggled on the way to a three-over 74 as the field had to contend
with some tough pin positions. Watched by huge galleries after teeing off from the 10th in a
high-profile grouping with former champions Phil Mickelson and
Padraig Harrington, Woods looked rusty as he mixed four bogeys with
a lone birdie and totalled 30 putts.
"It wasn't very good," said Woods, who clinched the most recent of
his PGA Championship titles in 2007 and has been stuck on 14 major
wins since his triumph at the 2008 U.S. Open.
[to top of second column] |
"A lot of bad shots and I never got a putt to the hole. For some
reason, I thought they were going to be a little bit quicker and I
didn't make the adjustment well enough.
"My swing was dialled in on that (practice) range out there.
Unfortunately, I didn't carry it to the golf course."
Woods dropped his first shot of the day at the par-three 11th where
he missed the green to the right, then chipped 13 feet past the cup
before failing to make the par putt.
His tee shot at the par-three 14th sailed way left and again he
failed to get up and down for par, but he picked up an unlikely
birdie at the par-four 16th when he holed out from 34 yards in the
middle of the fairway.
Out in one-over 37, Woods dropped further shots at the par-four
first, following another wayward drive, and also at the par-four
second, where he cursed loudly after his tee shot ended up in a
water hazard to the left.
He parred the last seven holes to end his round a distant nine
strokes off the lead.
Fan favourite Mickelson, who clinched the 2005 PGA Championship at
Baltusrol, fought back from a poor start with three late birdies to
card a 69 while Australian world number two Adam Scott opened with a
71.
"Given the first eight holes, it was a good start," left-hander
Mickelson said after clawing his way back from two over par with a
back nine of three-under 32.
"I go out tomorrow and shoot the round that I feel is coming then
I'm right in position to move up the leaderboard rather than just
trying to get back in position."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Frank Pingue)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|