Golf roundup: Pair of Patricks share lead at Hero World Challenge

Patrick Reed chips onto the 15th green at Albany Golf Club during the first round of the Hero World Challenge on Thursday at Albany Golf Club in Nassau, Bahamas.
Patrick Reed chips onto the 15th green at Albany Golf Club during the first round of the Hero World Challenge on Thursday at Albany Golf Club in Nassau, Bahamas.

NASSAU, Bahamas - Patrick Reed and Tiger Woods are about as far apart as can be on the leaderboard after one round of the Hero World Challenge.

Only they know how close they are after the Ryder Cup fallout.

Reed showed no sign of fatigue in his travels from Dubai to Hong Kong to the Bahamas in successive weeks, making birdie on three of his last five holes Thursday for a 7-under-par 65 and a share of the lead with late entry Patrick Cantlay.

Woods was never under par at any point and opened with a 73, eight shots behind and tied for 16th in an 18-man field.

Reed's comments after Europe won the Ryder Cup in September still follow him. In a phone interview with The New York Times hours after the loss, Reed blamed Jordan Spieth for them not playing together, U.S. captain Jim Furyk for twice leaving him on the bench - and he made it sound as though he was stuck with Woods as a partner in Paris.

"We spoke after the Ryder Cup for a long period of time," Woods said. "We talked among us, and it will stay between us."

This is one time Reed held his tongue. After his eighth and final birdie in balmy weather at Albany Golf Club, he acknowledged nothing more than they had talked.

"Whatever I talk about with other players and other guys stays between the guys," Reed said.

He also said he hasn't spoken to Furyk, and Reed told the New York Post on Tuesday that he hasn't spoken to Spieth but that Spieth has his number.

"It's been, I don't know how many weeks (since the Ryder Cup), but in the golf world, it's been a long time," Reed said. "All of us on our side have moved past that. Basically, when the tournament was over, all of us moved past it and we're just kind of getting ready for hopefully two years (from now)."

But there's a Presidents Cup in between, next December in Australia, and while the intensity is not the same, the team concept is intact. And it could get even more awkward considering Woods is the captain.

"I don't think anything needs to be resolved," Reed said.

Reed is used to going about life is own way, and he's not about to made any apologies. He just wants to play good golf, and there was plenty of that on a day that allowed for low scoring. All but three players were at par or better.

Woods was not one of them. His return to tournament competition didn't start nearly as well as his last one ended.

The World Challenge is his first 72-hole event since he won the Tour Championship at East Lake on Sept. 23, the end of a remarkable comeback season from a fourth back surgery that signaled Woods was capable of winning again.

Woods has been battling a fever. He said his ankles were sore from wear and tear, a problem he said has been around for a few months. On the golf course, he didn't hit it close enough or make enough putts, leading to only his third round over par in his past 21 rounds.

Woods made consecutive birdies to get back to even par, and then it came undone on the par-3 12th when his tee shot went left, just inside a hazard line but still in play. But the chip came out short, rolled down the bank and past his feet into the water. He took a penalty drop, got it on the green and missed the putt to take a triple bogey.

Leishman in good spot

GOLD COAST, Australia - Marc Leishman's quest for a first professional golf victory at home made a good start as he shot a 4-under 68 and sat two strokes behind the Australian PGA Championship's first-round leaders.

Leishman, starting on the 10th holes, had two bogeys and two birdies on his first nine before making birdie on four of his final seven at Royal Pines Resort.

Co-leaders Matt Jager and Jake McLeod, both from Australia, led by one stroke over Jae-woong Eom and Dimitrios Papadatos.

Leishman, who was in the group tied for fifth, said his round could have been better.

"Seven under would be a great score around here," he said. "It's been the goal of mine for the last few years, when I don't have my best golf, my best stuff, to still shoot under par. I'm getting better at it."

Perez plays well again

BEAU CHAMP, Mauritius - Victor Perez continued his fabulous start to life on the European Tour by sharing the first-round lead at 8-under 64 at the Mauritius Open.

Perez was tied with S. Chikkarangappa as the second event of the tour's 2018-19 season got underway.

Perez, a 26-year-old Frenchman, tied for third at the season-opening Hong Kong Open last weekend after graduating from the Challenge Tour. He began at the Four Seasons Golf Course in Mauritius with nine birdies and a single bogey.

A trio of golfers were one shot behind the co-leaders - Masahiro Kawamura, Kurt Kitayama and Jaco van Zyl.

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