Tiger wants to be ‘greedy host’
BETHESDA, Md. (AP) — It’s not often that a player is bold enough to challenge Tiger Woods on the golf course. Rarer still is when it happens during a pro-am round from one of his amateur partners.
“That still puts me 1 up,” Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo said to him Wednesday morning.
“Does it, now?” Woods replied, not sounding the least bit concerned.
The world’s No. 1 player then smoked a fairway metal down the 17th at Congressional Country Club. Romo, a scratch player who asked to play from the championship tees, followed with a 3-wood that traveled about a yard farther.
On the par-3 second, Romo appeared to have the edge when Woods bladed a bunker shot over the green and into the gallery. He didn’t finish out the hole, and when Romo three-putted from the fringe, the quarterback said, “You wouldn’t have made 4 from there.”
They didn’t mention the stakes or how many shots Woods gave Romo — if any — although it had a familiar conclusion.
“He contributed to my spending fund, which is nice,” Woods said later on his Web site.
The bold move by Woods was playing with the Cowboys’ quarterback in Washington Redskins country, and while it attracted a large gallery for the 6:30 a.m. tee time, the cheers and jeers were relatively tame.
“How about an autograph?” one fan said to Romo. “I’ve got a Tony Romo jersey on and I’ve already been in three fights.”
Romo kept walking.
“Jason Campbell signed it,” the fan called to him.
Campbell, the Redskins quarterback, played in another pro-am group, while Woods and Romo were joined by House Minority Leader John Boehner, who spent most of his day picking up his ball before he reached the green.
When the AT&T National gets under way today, the biggest star will be the tournament host.
Woods missed his own tournament last year, which was played a week after he had season-ending knee surgery. He had to watch from his couch as Anthony Kim closed with a bogey-free 65 for a two-shot victory.
“I thought he was here last year,” Kim said. “His name was all over the place.”
It is everywhere but the trophy.
Woods is playing for the first time since he failed to defend his title in the U.S. Open at Bethpage, largely due to his putting. Next up is the British Open in two weeks at Turnberry, a links course he has only seen on television.
For now, he is intent on being a “greedy host.”
He wants the 120-man field at Congressional to have a great week, as long as he goes home with the trophy.
“I always put in as much as I possibly can to win an event,” he said. “It is fun winning your own event.”
He has won the Chevron World Challenge, his charity tournament in California, four times.
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