Mcllroy takes charge in Florida

Rory McIlroy charges home with five birdies to take the first-round lead with Tiger Woods eight shots behind on 71.

Rory McIlroy quit this tournament mid-round last year [Reuters]

Rory McIlroy produced a barnstorming back nine, charging home with five birdies, to take the first-round lead at the $6m Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

A year after quitting the tournament mid-round with his game in a shambles, McIlroy cut a contrasting figure on his way to a flawless seven-under-par 63 in relatively benign afternoon conditions at PGA National.

Rory McIlroy (Britain)
63 
 Russell Henley (US)  64
 Rory Sabbatini (South Africa) 65
 William McGirt (US) 65 
 Jamie Donaldson (Britain) 65 
 Brice Garnett (US)  66 
 Tommy Gainey (US)  66 
 Derek Ernst (US)  66 
 Matt Every (US) 66 
 Brendon De Jonge (Zimbabwe) 66

“I made a great par save on nine which kept that bogey-free round alive,” the 24-year-old Northern Irishman told Golf Channel after seizing a one-shot lead over American Russell Henley.

Buoyed by that 10-foot par putt at the ninth, McIlroy birdied the next three holes and added further birdies on his last two holes, much to the delight of his parents Gerry and Rosie, who were in the gallery.

“It’s a good ball-striker’s course,” said McIlroy, who looked ominously close to regaining the form that made him the world’s top-ranked player at the time of his meltdown 12 months ago.

“If you can keep your ball in play and give yourself plenty of birdie chances, that’s the name of the game here.”

Five-times major champion Phil Mickelson did not do a lot wrong while carding a 70 in the afternoon while world number one Tiger Woods had an inconsistent 71 in the morning and ended the day tied for 81st in a field of 144.

McIlroy’s sizzling start against the strongest field in the world so far this year overshadowed Australian Adam Scott, one of his playing partners on the day.

Not that Scott, gearing up to defend his Masters title in April, started badly as he opened with a 68 to sit five strokes off the pace.

However the Australian’s move up the leaderboard stalled when he drowned his tee shot at the par-three 15th, the first of three dangerous holes in a stretch known as the “Bear Trap”, in honour of course designer Jack Nicklaus.

Source: Reuters