Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson did plenty of talking Tuesday. They spent their Wednesday's doing more of the walking.
Mickelson
(Staff)
After making appearances in front of a microphone earlier in the week, the two Masters champions hit the course Wednesday, playing in front of patrons at Augusta National Golf Club for the first time this week.
Woods played only the back nine in a morning grouping with friend Mark O'Meara and Masters rookie Arjun Atwal and left the course without comment. He's scheduled to tee off this morning at 10:41 with Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell and Australian Robert Allenby.
Mickelson's first trip around Augusta National this week was a bit more adventurous.
The reigning Masters champion was the first on the course Wednesday when he teed off at 8 a.m. with 1992 Masters winner Fred Couples and Kevin Streelman. The threesome hit their usual tee shots on the eighth hole but had to pause on their walk up the fairway when a small deer bounded across their paths. According to the combined accounts from patrons and gallery guards, the deer entered the golf course from the right side of the first hole and raced across the first and ninth fairways before meeting up with Mickelson at eight.
The deer darted toward the second and third fairways and eventually ended up near the fifth and sixth holes, where it left the course.
"I've been out here 25 years, and I've never seen anything like that," gallery guard Steve Churm said to a group of patrons.
Woods
(Staff)
Mickelson, who pulled his tee shot into the pinestraw down the left side of the eighth fairway just before the deer encounter, tried to play his errant shot. But a large group of patrons, still buzzing about the deer sighting, lingered dangerously close to Mickelson's line of sight and had to be persuaded away with a little humor.
"Seriously, sir, it's going to hurt if it hits you," Mickelson said, drawing laughs from the patrons. "Me? I'll just drop another."
Mickelson, playing his first round of golf since last week's win at the Houston Open, cut his practice round short after 15 holes to prepare for the Par-3 Contest. He shot 2-under 25 on the nine-hole course.
The three-time Masters champion will go off this afternoon in the second-to-last group at 1:48 with Australian Geoff Ogilvy and reiging U.S. Amateur Champion Peter Uihlein.
