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Woods shoots 71

DORAL, Fla. - Tiger Woods returned to stroke play for the first time since winning the U.S. Open, and so much of it felt familiar except for the leaderboard at Doral.

His name was nowhere to be found Thursday at the CA Championship.

His wife, Elin, walked the back nine a month after giving birth to their son. It was her first time watching Woods play since Torrey Pines. Woods found himself more concerned with posting a score than beating one player, as was the case in match play two weeks ago.

The crowd was large, as usual for the Blue Monster, but shouts of "Welcome back!" were replaced by "Vamos, Tigre!"

But as players from all around the globe kept pouring in birdies - relative unknown players like Prayad Marksaeng and Jeev Milka Singh, followed by the familiar name of Phil Mickelson - Woods was stuck in the middle of the pack of an 80-man field.

Mickelson chipped in three times, twice while finishing with 3 straight birdies, on his way to a 7-under 65 that gave him a four-way share of the lead with Retief Goosen, Marksaeng and Singh.

Woods made only 3 birdies - 2 of them on par 5s - and had to settle for a 71 that put him in a tie for 40th.

"I need to be a touch sharper," said Woods, who has never finished out of the top 10 at Doral.

Mickelson has rarely been this excited. He can't recall hitting the ball this long or having a short game this superb. Along with taking only 8 putts on the back nine, he pounded tee shot so far that he had wedge left for his second shot on the par-5 first hole.

"It was just nice to see the ball go in the hole," Mickelson said.

Woods didn't seen much of that, twisting his body and buckling his knees when one putt after another failed to drop. It was his highest opening-round score in seven starts on the Blue Monster.

"It was not like I was playing poorly and shot 71," Woods said. "I played well and just didn't make any putts."

The problem for him was just about everyone else did.

Singh ran off 5 birdies in a six-hole stretch around the turn and was the first player to post a 65 on a balmy, breezy afternoon. Goosen, switching back to a conventional putter, ran off 8 birdies in his round of 65. And the real surprise was Marksaeng, of Thailand, who shot 30 on his back nine to join the leaders.

The group 1 shot behind included British Open and PGA champion Padraig Harrington, who didn't feel as though he did much of anything right and had his best score of the year.

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