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Schwartzel Seizes Memorial Lead
McIlroy Misery Continues at Memorial
Schwartzel Seizes Memorial Lead
DUBLIN, Ohio, May 30, 2013 (AFP) - South Africa's Charl Schwartzel piled up 10 birdies in a seven-under par 65 on Thursday to seize the first-round lead at the US PGA Tour's Memorial, where defending champ Tiger Woods was six adrift.
Former Masters champion Schwartzel bounced back from a double-bogey at his penultimate hole to birdie his last, taking a one-stroke lead over American Scott Piercy.
World number one Woods, seeking a sixth Memorial title, played in the afternoon when birdies were harder to come by. He had five birdies and four bogeys in a one-under 71, but ended his day on a down note with a bogey that left him tied for 27th.
"I didn't score very well compared to how I hit it," Woods said. "I hit it pretty good. I just didn't make anything today.
"Hopefully tomorrow I'll make a few more putts," he added.
Chinese teen Guan Tianlang just missed out on joining the group at one-under. The 14-year-old amateur sensation was two-under through nine holes and one-under after a bogey at 16, but closed with a bogey to lie tied for 41st on even par.
Schwartzel was delighted to avoid a disappointing end to his productive day.
"The birdie on the last definitely will make my evening a lot better," he said. "I felt like I played really well, just ... sort of ticking the ball over and got it to eight-under. Just had a bad one on number eight, made a double. And that was the very worst I played all day."
After teeing off on 10, Schwartzel picked up his first birdie of the day at 11. But after a bogey at 13, where he three-putted from seven feet, he decided to go back to a putting grip with his finger extended down the shaft -- having reverted to a conventional grip on the advice of Presidents Cup International Team captain Nick Price.
The move paid off immediately, with birdies at the next four holes.
"It just didn't feel very comfortable," Schwartzel said of the conventional grip.
"It felt really shaky. I switched back to my finger down the shaft and sort of changed the ball position ... and that felt comfortable.
"As you know, putting is all about comfort at the end of the day," he said.
Schwartzel did plenty of good work otherwise, hitting all but one fairway and two greens in regulation.
He had a one-stroke lead over American Scott Piercy, whose eight birdies included a run of five in a row starting at the par-three fourth.
Piercy, who has never finished better than 48th in the Memorial, hosted by Jack Nicklaus, said his determination to pull out his driver less had paid off.
"I've hit a lot of drivers and kind of pounded down golf courses, and I haven't had much success here doing it," he said. "I thought I'd hit a lot of three-woods today... maybe I'm getting older."
Piercy was one stroke in front of a group of four players on 67: South Korean Charlie Wi and Americans Josh Teater, Russell Henley and Kyle Stanley.
Americans Bill Haas and Matt Kuchar shared seventh place on 68, with Australian Matt Jones, Sweden's Robert Karlsson, Michael Thompson and Chris Stroud on 69.
McIlroy Misery Continues at Memorial
DUBLIN, Ohio, May 30, 2013 (AFP) - World number two Rory McIlroy continued to wrestle with his game on Thursday, battling to a six-over par 78 in the first round of the US PGA Tour's Memorial tournament.
A week after he missed the cut at the European PGA Championship at Wentworth, and with the US Open at Merion a fortnight away, the two-time major champion acknowledged his game "just isn't all there at the minute."
"But I'm working hard and I'm trying to figure things out and hopefully they'll come around soon," McIlroy said.
McIlroy's day opened encouragingly enough, with a birdie at the par-four 10th at Muirfield Village.
He four-putted from 58 feet for a double-bogey at the par-three 12th, and bogeyed the next, adding two more bogeys before making the turn.
A birdie at the par-five fifth was sandwiched between bogeys at the second, third and seventh. He missed seven greens and needed 33 putts.
He had a four-footer for birdie at his final hole, but couldn't get it to drop.
"The last four weeks have been the same," said McIlroy, who has three top-10 finishes in his last four starts but has been unable to build any real momentum.
"I've missed a lot of short putts. It's probably lack of confidence more than anything else. And those are the sort of putts that are important to keep the momentum of the round going. And they're the putts that I'm not really making."
McIlroy, who has fielded questions this season about his switch to Nike equipment and in recent days about a rumored split with Dublin-based Horizon Sports to set up his own management company, said he was trying to stay patient.
"A few bad rounds of golf isn't going to ruin anything," he said. "But I don't really have many explanations for this."
Leading first-round scores on Thursday in the US PGA Tour $6.2 million Memorial tournament (USA unless noted, par-72)
65 - Charl Schwartzel (RSA)
66 - Scott Piercy
67 - Josh Teater, Russell Henley, Kyle Stanley, Charlie Wi (KOR)
68 - Bill Haas, Matt Kuchar
69 - Matt Jones (AUS), Michael Thompson, Robert Karlsson (SWE), Chris Stroud
70 - Brandt Jobe , Ryan Moore, Stewart Cink, Justin Leonard, Billy Horschel, Justin Rose (ENG), Derek Ernst, Scott Stallings, James Driscoll, Graham DeLaet (CAN), Fred Couples, Trevor Immelman (RSA), Gary Woodland, George Coetzee (RSA)
71 - John Senden (AUS), David Hearn (CAN), Roberto Castro, Martin Laird (SCO), Bubba Watson, Carl Pettersson (SWE), Cameron Tringale, Kevin Chappell, Henrik Stenson (SWE), Tommy Gainey, Kevin Streelman, Tiger Woods, Keegan Bradley, Bud Cauley