PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Standing in the middle of the 14th fairway with a sand wedge in his hands, Tiger Woods had a chance Sunday.

At making a birdie. At cutting into Webb Simpson’s lead. Maybe even at winning for the first time since returning from a fourth back surgery.

Woods was 110 yards out and four shots back in the final round. He struck the ball cleanly, stared at it intently, then watched it spin off the green .

Woods fell a few feet short of providing the first real drama at TPC Sawgrass.

He missed an 8-foot par putt that caused him to flip his club, ended up with a disappointing bogey and limped home with a double bogey at the famed 17th. Woods, however, left the course feeling better than ever about his comeback.

“This weekend was more like it,” Woods said.

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Woods shot a 3-under 69 in the final round and tied for 11th at 11-under 277. His round could have been much closer to the 65 he shot Saturday.

“If I would have got off to a better start this week, if I would have had the game I had this weekend at the beginning of the week, I would have gave Webb a little bit of a run,” said Woods, who ended seven shots behind.

Woods felt like he finally pulled together all aspects of his game: His driving was impeccable, his iron play was better than it’s been all week and his putting was as good as it’s been all season. He stirred packed galleries into a frenzy while wearing his traditional red shirt. Fans young and old stood dozens deep, scurrying from tee to fairway to green, just for a peek at Woods.

“I hit it so good,” said Woods, glossing over a number of less-than-ideal wedge shots in the final round. “It was nice. I had control of it from tee to green. I made some putts. I felt good on basically every facet of the game. Not to really mishit a shot today and only shoot 3-under par is just weird because I played much better than that.”

But the back nine was his biggest issue all week.

Woods was 11 under on the front, including a scorching 10 under during the weekend after making the cut on the number.

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He was even on the back, which was slightly easier for everyone else.

Still, the big-picture view is mostly positive for him.

“There’s no way I would have predicted I would be at this point at the beginning of the year, the way I was just coming back and just trying to get a feel for it and then hopefully have a schedule,” he said.

“Didn’t know. But now I feel like I’ve got my playing feels and I’m playing tournament golf and I’ve got it. I’m not that far off from winning golf tournaments.”

Woods will take two weeks off before playing the Memorial Tournament, which potentially could be his final tuneup before the U.S. Open in June.

He moved up 12 spots in the world ranking, rising to No. 80.

“He’s clearly playing some really good golf,” Jason Day said.


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