MELBOURNE,
Australia
-
Tiger
Woods
lived
up
to
eight
months
of
hype
Thursday
by
running
off
three
straight
birdies
late
in
his
round
for
a
6-under
66
that
gave
him
a
share
of
the
lead
in
the
Australian
Masters.
Playing
for
the
first
time
Down
Under
in
11
years,
before
an
enormous
gallery
only
seen
at
major
championships,
Woods
putted
for
birdie
on
every
hole
until
the
last
one.
He
pulled
his
drive
into
a
tea
tree,
chopped
out
into
the
rough
and
took
two
putts
from
40
feet
for
his
lone
bogey.
"Other
than
that,
it
was
a
pretty
good
day,"
Woods
said.
He
was
tied
with
Australia's
James
Nitties
and
South
Africa's
Branden
Grace.
Nitties,
who
easily
retained
his
PGA
Tour
card
in
his
rookie
season
in
America,
played
behind
Woods
and
finished
with
two
birdies
on
his
final
three
holes.
Grace
ran
off
four
birdies
at
the
turn
for
a
solid
start
in
his
first
trip
to
Melbourne.
Woods
missed
only
two
fairways
in
a
round
that
was
relatively
free
of
stress.
He
hit
driver
off
the
tee
five
times
and
except
for
the
final
hole,
kept
it
in
play
and
away
from
the
trouble.
Woods
chose
to
lay
back
from
the
bunkers
on
several
of
the
short
par
4s
at
Kingston
Heath,
and
a
couple
of
times
hit
poor
shots
or
played
purposely
away
from
the
flags.
"You
play
for
what
it's
giving
you,"
Woods
said.
"I
didn't
have
to
change
my
game
plan
on
any
hole."
He
made
his
move
toward
the
end
of
the
round,
hitting
three-wood
to
the
294-yard
sixth
hole
that
held
its
line
to
the
left
of
the
bunkers
and
came
up
just
short
of
the
green,
leaving
an
easy
chip
to
a
foot.
After
a
poor
tee
shot
left
him
a
bad
angle
to
the
green
on
the
seventh,
Woods
hit
eight-iron
over
the
corner
of
trees
to
20
feet
for
another
birdie,
then
hit
eight-iron
to
seven
feet
on
No.
8
to
set
up
his
third
straight
birdie.
Far
more
impressive
than
the
golf,
however,
was
the
gallery.
Traffic
was
backed
up
along
Kingston
Road
outside
the
club
for
miles
in
the
hour
before
Woods
teed
off.
"I
know,"
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