Tiger faces long, tough test to repeat at US Open
Tiger Woods began his final practice round of the US Open by hitting a 5-wood for his second shot on a par 4, which is rare for someone with his power. Stranger still was that it wasn't enough club to reach the 10th green.
The stubborn side of the defending champion showed up on the 15th fairway at Bethpage Black. Staring toward the elevated green, he backed off his shot and turned to his caddie as if to change clubs, then decided to stick with the 4-iron already in his hands. Woods hit it pure, and when the ball barely reached the green, he laughed.
"I've already hit too many 3-irons on par 4s today," he said.
The scorecard at Bethpage Black shows an additional 212 yards from 2002, when Woods was the only player to finish under par and won the US Open by three shots over Phil Mickelson.
With soggy turf and rain part of every forecast, the Black feels even longer.
"From tee to green, this golf course is all you want,"Woods said. "With the weather coming in here this week, it's only going to get longer and harder. And it's going to be even more difficult."
And that could be right up his alley.
Woods has been on the fast track in the majors for as long as he has been a pro, and more history could await this week.
The US Open is the only major he has failed to win in consecutive years, and a victory would make him only the seventh player to win back-to-back. Having won at Bethpage Black in 2002, he will try to join Willie Anderson (1905 at Myopia Hunt) as the only players to defend a US Open on a course where they were the most recent champion.

