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Dustin Johnson posts 5-under 66 for early lead in Boston

By Doug Ferguson
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Dustin Johnson posts 5-under 66 for early lead in Boston

NORTON, Mass. — Now that he's finally won again, Dustin Johnson is starting to look as dangerous as ever.

One week after Johnson ended a five-month dry spell brought on by a back injury, he easily handled the early cold and a steady win at TPC Boston for a 5-under 66 to take the early lead in the opening round of the Dell Technologies Championship.

And the world's No. 1 player made it look easy on a tough day for scoring.

He started with a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 10. He made the turn with a 6-iron from 220 yards that sailed high and rode the left-to-right wind into 4 feet for eagle. When another beautiful tee shot settled into a divot on the reachable par-5 second hole, he laid up short of the water and still made birdie.

"Put together a pretty good score," Johnson said.

Marc Leishman and Kyle Stanley were one shot back among the early starters who had to face the surprising chill of morning, a cruel reminder that the end of a New England summer is not far away.

MORE: Full Dell Scores | Photos

Jonas Blixt was among those at 68, a good start because the Swede is at No. 84 in the FedEx Cup and only the top 70 in the standings move on to the next playoff event outside Chicago in two weeks.

Johnson played in the group featuring the top three in the FedEx Cup. PGA champion Justin Thomas made 16 pars in his round of 71. British Open champion Jordan Spieth, who lost to Johnson in a sudden-death playoff last week on Long Island, didn't make a birdie until his 13th hole and shot 72.

"Each part of my game was a little off," Spieth said.

Nothing looked wrong with Johnson, except for one bad swing and one aggressive putt.

His 25-foot birdie attempt on the 14th hole ran about 5 feet by the cup, and he missed that coming back to slow some early momentum. He bounced back with a wedge into 6 feet for birdie, made eagle on the 18th to reach the turn at 4 under and then had a simple iron off the tee at No. 1. But it sailed right into the woods in a hazard, and he punched out and missed an 8-foot par putt.

Otherwise, there was very little stress except for one young fan who kept referring to him as "Shank."

"When you win, you're playing well, so it gives you a lot of confidence," Johnson said. "For me, that was one thing that was probably lacking a little bit the last few months is just the confidence, because I wasn't seeing the shots that I wanted to see. I wasn't consistently hitting them. But after last week, I've got a lot of confidence now. I feel like the things I've been working on, they are back to working."

That was as close as a dissertation on golf as the No. 1 player will allow. Johnson doesn't spend deep analysis over the way he plays. He sees the shot, pulls a club and usually hits it where he's aiming. That's what led him to three straight victories going into the Masters until he wrenched his back when he slipped on the stairs and had to withdraw from the first major of the year.

The victory last week was his fourth of the year, tied with Thomas for most on the PGA Tour this season.

As easy as it looked for Johnson, it was anything but that for Kelly Kraft. At No. 64 in the FedEx Cup, his season might be over after he took a 12 on the par-5 second hole. Kraft hit his third into the water and his fifth shot over the green. He tried to hit a shot from a native area, took another penalty drop to go back to the fairway and hit that one into the water. He eventually two-putted for a 12 and withdrew after 14 holes with a sore foot.

Ryan Moore, who missed time with a shoulder injury this summer, had four double bogeys in his round of 82. He also withdrew.

DIVOTS: The Phil and Amy Mickelson Foundation is donating $100,000 to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts in the Houston area. Mickelson and his wife started the foundation in 2004 with an aim toward helping families recover from loss of life, limbs or lack of opportunity. ... Brian Harman opened with a 68 and wasn't the least bit bothered that Johnson was already two shots ahead of him. For one thing, it's the first round. For another, it's nothing new. "I have to play against him every week. He's usually pretty far up there," said Harman, who won the Wells Fargo Championship this year by one shot over Johnson and Pat Perez.

This article was written by Doug Ferguson from The Associated Press and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.