Snedeker grabs two-stroke lead in Houston
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[November 06, 2020]
(Reuters) - Brandt Snedeker
birdied two of his final four holes to grab the lead after the first
round of the Houston Open while Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth and
Brooks Koepka all struggled in the last tournament before next
week's Masters.
Snedeker, who won the 2012 FedEx Cup, feasted on Memorial Park's par
fives, nailing birdies on all three of them behind some pinpoint
accuracy off the tee to card a five-under 65 to sit two strokes
ahead of six players.
"This course is a long, tough golf course, so to play well you need
to take advantage of the scoring holes, which I did a great job of
today," he said.
The American said he was boosted by the fans in attendance. The
tournament is the second to allow a limited number of fans to attend
since golf came back from its COVID-19 shutdown in June.
"It's great to hear some claps and people excited for good shots and
some birdies," said Snedeker, who is seeking his 10th career win on
the Tour.
"That's a big reason why I think I played well. I was excited to be
out there and (had) been missing them, so glad to have them back."
World number one Johnson, playing in his first tournament since
testing positive for the disease and spending 11 days in isolation,
had a stretch of three consecutive bogeys before making the turn and
was forced to settle for a round of two-over 72.
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Brandt Snedeker high
fives his caddie after he finished five under during the first round
of the Houston Open golf tournament at Memorial Park Golf Course.
Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports
Former world number one Spieth, seeking his first win since the 2017
British Open, went out in the morning wave and held a share of the
lead through 12 holes before making two bogeys and two double-bogeys
en route to a three-over 73.
Spieth's playing partner Koepka mixed three birdies with three
bogeys and one double bogey for a round of two-over 72.
"I hit it terrible today," four-time major winner Koepka said.
"It's funny because I've hit it so good the last couple weeks and
so that was disappointing."
The round was called for darkness with a handful of players left to
complete their final holes.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles and Frank Pingue in
Toronto; Editing by Ed Osmond and Stephen Coates)
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