Ryo Ishikawa, of Japan, hits a shot from the rough to the 15th green during the first round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational golf tournament at Bay Hill, Thursday, March 22, 2012, in Orlando, Fla.
John Raoux, Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — Tiger Woods isn't about to complain about a boring day at work.
There really wasn't much for him to dissect Thursday at Bay Hill. Competing for the first time since he withdrew from Doral with tightness in his left Achilles tendon, Woods pieced together a 3-under 69 and was three shots behind Jason Dufner and Charlie Wi.
Woods drove the ball well. He was OK with his irons (only two of them were within 15 feet of the flag, at least on the par 3s and par 4s). He three-putted twice, once for bogey and the other time for par. And his left leg, the center of so much attention, didn't bother him.
"Not in my mind at all," said Woods, a six-time winner at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. "I'm just out there playing. I'm feeling good. I've been getting treatment. Everything's good. No swelling. If I can just keep it that way, everything will be great."
For the most part, it was a quiet start all around for Bay Hill.
The excitement came from Anthony Kim, who drilled a 5-iron into the cup for a hole-in-one on the 17th, part of a torrid stretch on the back nine in which he shot 32 despite making two bogeys. Ryan Moore also made an ace, his on the seventh hole.
Phil Mickelson shot 73, and it wasn't the stock variety. There was the 15th, when his shot from a fairway bunker caromed off a Magnolia tree and he still managed a par. He went out-of-bounds on the 18th hole for double bogey, into the water on the third hole for double bogey and still figured he was a good round away from being right in the hunt. And he was right.
Nick Watney shot a 68 and was thrilled to see a few putts go in.
"I putted really well and it's nice to do that because that's been my Achilles this year," Watney said.
Woods' Achilles also used to be his putting, until it actually became his Achilles tendon.
This is Woods' last tournament before the Masters, where he has not won since 2005. It's part of eight straight days of golf, which began Sunday with a scouting trip to Augusta National, and there has been concern that his Achilles tendon might flare up again. Woods said he has no way of knowing if it will tighten up on him as it did at Doral, though he said he has dealt with tightness before and it didn't linger.
Whatever the case, he wasn't worried about it on a sunny Thursday morning in his former town.
"I didn't really do anything great today," said Woods, who had only two approach shots inside 15 feet on the par 3s and par 4s. "I was just solid all day. I drove the ball well, hit my irons decent and putted all right. It's just one of those days where not a lot was going on."
It still was meaningful for the co-leaders, for different reasons.
Both are searching for their first PGA Tour victory, and both have had close calls this year. Wi had a three-shot lead going into the final round at Pebble Beach, but then he four-putted for double bogey and wound up a forgotten runner-up to Mickelson.
Dufner shared the lead last week at Innisbrook going into the last round and couldn't make the momentum-saving putts. He wound up in a tie for 10th, three shots out of the lead.
But with his eagle on the 16th hole, a 4-iron into a left-to-right wind — the direction that can give him fits — he joined Wi atop the leaderboard and continued his solid play. This was the fourth time on the Florida swing that Dufner has been at least tied for the lead after the completion of a round. Trouble is, none of those rounds has been on a Sunday.
He also made his share of putts, mostly because he felt better about where they were going. Dufner realized that he was aiming too far to the right, which instinctively didn't feel right and made him hook some of those putts to the left.
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