* Woods and Mickelson open with 71s at Quail Hollow
(Updates at end of round)
May 3 (Reuters) - While Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson made
uneven starts, Stewart Cink birdied his last three holes to
surge into a three-way tie for the lead in Thursday's opening
round of the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, North
Carolina.
American Cink, seeking his first PGA Tour victory since his
playoff win at the 2009 British Open, fired a seven-under-par 65
to end a humid day at Quail Hollow Club level with compatriots
Ryan Moore and Webb Simpson.
Australian John Senden, Britain's Brian Davis and American
Rickie Fowler, D.A. Points and Patrick Reed had matching 66s as
golfing heavyweights Woods and Mickelson had to settle for 71s.
U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy bogeyed his final hole for a
70, British world number three Lee Westwood carded a 71 and 2009
U.S. Open winner Lucas Glover launched his title defence with a
72.
Cink, who has mainly struggled for form since pulling off
his first major victory at Turnberry in Scotland three years
ago, was delighted to remain bogey-free despite not playing at
his very best.
"It was a good round," the 38-year-old told reporters after
sinking a 20-footer on his final hole, the par-four ninth. "It
wasn't a great round, far from perfect, but I had a few putts go
in the hole and managed my misses pretty well."
Woods, champion here in 2007, put himself under early
pressure after bogeying two of his first six holes on his return
to the PGA Tour for the first time since last month's Masters.
"I made too many mistakes on the front nine," the 14-times
major champion said after mixing four birdies with three bogeys.
"I didn't take care of the par-fives and I had an easy up and in
at eight, which I messed up there."
Four-times major champion Mickelson was briefly derailed by
a triple-bogey at the par-four fourth where he hit his tee shot
out of bounds.
"I played pretty well today and hit a lot of greens but made
one mistake with the triple there," left-hander Mickelson said
after a five-birdie display. "That was a really poor tee shot.
"Fortunately I came back to shoot one under. I'll try and
come out tomorrow and shoot something in the mid-60s and get
into the weekend ... if I can get a hot round, I'll get right in
it."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by
Frank Pingue)
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