Tiger Woods' round, which looked so promising (three under) through five holes, started to go south (he finished with a seven-over 77) with a double bogey at No. 15 after his 4-iron went into the pond right of the green.
"I've been there," an Atlanta Athletic Club member who was marshalling the 15th hole said.
Woods' blunder was by far the only one at the 15th. As of the 3 p.m., No. 15 was playing to a 3.5517 stroke average. At that point, only the demanding par-4 18th was playing more difficult. There had been seven birdies (one by Steve Stricker, en route to his 63), 40 pars, 27 bogeys, 11 double bogeys and two "others."
"They wanted a drivable par 4," said Davis Love III. "They got it."
(Related: A virtual tour of Atlantic Athletic Club)
"I'm not a huge fan of playing a 260-yard par 3 with water and bunkers, but like I said yesterday, we all have to play it, we all have to suck it up and try to hit a good shot there," said Stricker. "You're going to see some big numbers there and you're going to see some birdies there. But it's very difficult."
As Bob Sowards, an Ohio club professional who carded a first-round 69 said after parring No. 15 with a 17-degree hybrid and two putts, "I don't play many holes like that."
A decade after making a hole-in-one on No. 15 during the third round of the 2001 PGA at Atlanta AC, David Toms hit a 2-hybrid and made a par. "If I still had a 5-wood, it would have been a 5-wood shot today," Toms said. "I guess it's fair. It's a tough, long par 3. They give you a little bail-out over there to the left, short and left if you want to play it that way."
--Bill Fields





























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