struggles in a 13-month span where he has managed only three 72-hole finishes.
After sending his first tee shot well left into pine trees near the adjacent ninth fairway, Woods blasted over the trees to five feet from the cup for a birdie and practiced his chipping on the hole as well.
“My chipping is fine and today was good as I wanted to test out some wedges,” Woods said. “That was why I was chipping a little bit more.”
Woods put his approach at the par-5 second 30 feet from the cup but missed an eagle putt. At the third he chipped within inches of the cup. At the par-3 fourth his stopped his tee shot 10 feet from the cup.
At the seventh Woods put his approach three feet from the cup. At nine, he chipped to 20 feet and sank the long par putt.
“Don´t ever underestimate Tiger Woods,” O´Meara said. “I saw some good signs out there.”
World number one Rory McIlroy, who would complete a career Grand Slam and win his third major in a row by capturing his first green jacket on Sunday, practiced Monday alongside two amateur debutantes, reigning British Amateur champion Bradley Neil of Scotland and American Byron Meth, the US Public Links champion.
But as excited as people are about McIlroy´s run at history, curiosity over Woods stole the show Monday.
“There´s always a buzz when he´s in the field,” Sweden´s second-ranked Henrik Stenson said. “It´s good to see him back in action and see where his game is at.”
“We want him back. We need him back,” said American Brandt Snedeker. “He brings a lot of drama. I would love to see him in it on Sunday.”
Australia´s fifth-ranked Jason Day hopes to stay under the radar with the most attention on McIlroy, US star Jordan Spieth and especially Woods.
“Everyone´s excited and interested to see how he performs this week, what the state of the game is for him, because he´s such a huge part of golf,” Day said.
Reigning US Open champion Martin Kaymer of Germany, who has endured a comeback of his own, said Woods must have a mental fight as well as a physical one with all the attention on his game.
“Mentally, it must be quite exhausting and we know how important the mental part is in golf,” Kaymer said.
“Hopefully he´s strong enough, he has people to talk to, and he finds a way to compete as good as he can. Because we all know when he´s around, somehow it does make us play better, as well.”