Rare
consecutive eagles boost Peterson to lead in Charlotte
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[May 04, 2018]
(Reuters) - Self-deprecating
Texan John Peterson recorded consecutive eagles for the first time
in his career to vault to the first-round lead at the Wells Fargo
Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina on Thursday.
Pity so few people saw the rare feat.
Few of the thousands who turned up to follow Tiger Woods bothered
hanging around afterwards to watch Peterson, who finished in some
style playing in peace and quiet in one of the final groups of the
day.
He holed a 55-foot bunker shot at the par-five seventh (his 16th
hole), and went even better by holing a wedge shot from 107 yards at
the par-four eighth.
He was rewarded with a six-under-par 65 at Quail Hollow, and a
two-stroke lead.
"Pretty uneventful hole-outs, but they went in nonetheless,"
Peterson told reporters.
"I've never made back-to-back eagles in a tournament and I don't
think I've done it in practice."
Peterson nearly made it three straight eagles when his approach shot
from the rough at the par-four ninth honed in on the pin, but the
law of averages caught up with him and the ball did not drop.
"There was only like seven or eight people and a golden retriever in
the grandstands back there and they were getting loud," he said. "So
I figured if seven people were getting pretty loud, it had to be
pretty close."
Alas, the ball trickled seven feet beyond the cup and he missed the
birdie chance, but it was still a good day in the office, and a
timely one too.
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Peterson, 29, is playing on what the PGA Tour call a "medical
extension" after having hand surgery two years ago.
He has to compile about $300,000 in earnings this week and in his
next two starts to regain full exempt status.
If he falls short, however, Peterson says he will be quite happy to
quit the nomadic lifestyle and go home to Fort Worth to sell real
estate.
"I just don't enjoy the travel out here very much," he said.
"I don't like being away from Fort Worth. I just like being at home
and I like being around my family and friends more than I like
chasing it around here.
"I've got everything in place for both sides of it, so I'm not going
to be bothered if I make it (back onto the Tour full-time).
"If I don't make it, I'm not playing golf anymore."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; editing by Amlan
Chakraborty)
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