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Woods leads at Sydney

Tiger Woods walked off golf course to see his name atop the leaderboard today in the Australian Open. Even more pleasing to him was the way he got there.

SYDNEY, Australia — Tiger Woods walked off golf course to see his name atop the leaderboard today in the Australian Open. Even more pleasing to him was the way he got there.

With control of his shots and comfortable over the putter, Woods put together his best back-to-back rounds of the year with a 5-under 67 that gave him a one-shot lead among the early starters in the second round.

If it holds up at the end of the day, it would be his first time in the lead after any round since the third day of the Chevron World Challenge last year, and the first time against a full field since his last win two years ago in the Australian Masters.

Woods was tied for the first-round lead at The Barclays last year.

“I really played well,” Woods said. “Even though I shot 5 under, it felt it could have been eight or nine deep.”

He was at 9-under 135, one shot clear of a familiar name in these parts, and to Woods. Peter O’Malley is a member at The Lakes and birdied his last two holes for a 66. O’Malley is memorable to some golf fans in the United States as the No. 64 seed who beat Woods in the opening round of the Match Play Championship at La Costa in 2002.

Jason Day, who played alongside Woods, managed to limit the damage from a few wayward shots and had a 68 to finish two behind.

Jarrod Lyle, the 18-hole leader, was among those who played in the afternoon.

Robert Allenby, who has played with Woods many times over the years, saw a game that was starting to look vaguely familiar.

“Probably in the last six months, that’s the best I’ve seen him play,” Allenby said. “I’ve seen him at his absolute best ... that was a different human being. He’s on his way back, that’s for sure.

“I think where he is right now is good enough to win. I think you’ll find if he keeps going the way he is going, he’ll win over the weekend.”

Woods has hit plenty of crisp shots, but if there was one that showed an increasing confidence in his swing, it came toward the end of the round on the par-5 eighth. He was in the middle of the fairway, 280 yards from the hole and facing a 24-kilometre-per-hour wind. The shot was pure, a bullet with the slightest fade to skirt a bunker and roll onto the green.

“I hit that good,” Woods said. “It was a slightly hanging lie and I had to start it at the bunker and just hammer it. It slid about three yards. That was the best shot I’ve hit the last couple of days.”

Woods still didn’t take advantage of the all the par 5s, failing to make birdie on No. 11 and No. 17, and having to settle for one when he missed a 10-foot eagle putt on the 14th.

And he finally made a bogey on the 30th hole of this tournament with a drive into a dune, and an approach that left him a bad angle to the green.

He followed, however, with a 25-foot birdie putt on No. 4 that broke some six inches at the end and caused Woods to let out a little emotion, tapping his fist toward the ground. His only other mistake was a stinger 3-iron into the wind on the sixth that turned just enough to catch the sand amid more dunes.

A large crowd that packed into the knolls and dunes became louder the longer Woods stayed atop the leaderboard, and even some of the tournament officials appeared to get wrapped up in the day. At one point, they had his name spelled simply “Tiger” on a leaderboard.

For Woods, it was a strange sight.

“It feels good,” he said of his name listed first. “It feels good to be there playing properly.”

He says he has not forgotten how to win, and that includes the understanding that the tournament is not even halfway over.

“I’ve got two more days to go, bro,” he told one reporter. “I may not have the lead.”