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John Daly reacts after missing a fairway shot on the 1st hole. Rob Griffith/AP/Press Association Images
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John Daly in Australian Open meltdown

Tiger in the mix at Australian Open but Daly walks his way into the headlines again.

WE’VE BEEN HERE before.

John Daly is again the top of conversation in the headlines this morning – and, sadly, not for the right reasons.

Australian Open tournament director Trevor Herden has hit out at the America, calling him “unprofessional” after he stormed off the course midway through his first round today.

It started on the short par-4 10th when Daly tried to drive the green. He thought his ball was in the front bunker, but after blasting out to about four feet, he realized he had hit a practice ball from the adjacent range. That’s when he was told his ball was in the back bunker, and with a penalty shot and a three-putt, he wound up with a triple bogey.

Daly was annoyed, then hit his second on the par-5 11th into the water. Then he hit another into the lake. And another. And another. The final tally was seven balls, and it might have been more except that he had none left in his bag.

Daly turned over his scorecard to Hunter Mahan and Craig Parry and walked off the course.

He later said on Twitter, “when u run out of balls u run out of balls. yes, I shook my player’s partners hands & signed my card w/rules official.”

In 2002, Daly threw his putter into the pond and failed to sign for a 78 at the Australian PGA, and he was fine $5,600. Two years ago, he smashed a spectator’s camera into a tree at Royal Sydney during the Australian Open.

The rap sheet is even longer in the United States, from his 18 on the sixth hole at Bay Hill to the time he swatted a moving ball on the turtleback greens of Pinehurst No 2 in the 1999 US Open.

“You always hear a story about John Daly doing something,” Mahan said. “Right in the middle of it. Great.”

Parry came to Daly’s defense, saying he had the right club to reach the 11th green, but failed to realize the strength of the wind.

Tour officials sounded as though they had seen enough. Brian Thorburn, chief executive of the PGA of Australia, said it was withdrawing its invitation for Daly to play in the Australian PGA in two weeks at Coolum.

“The PGA does not need this kind of behavior tarnishing the achievements of other players and the reputation of our tournaments,” Thorburn said in a statement. “John is not welcome at Coolum.”

Tiger Woods, meanwhile, played his first bogey-free round in nine months, a big development in any tournament he plays.

Jarrod Lyle had a 7-under 65 at The Lakes for a one-shot lead over Dustin Johnson and Nick Watney, two of the eight Americans tuning up for the Presidents Cup next week.

Thousands of fans who stood atop sand dunes had reason to be impressed with Woods in his first tournament in Sydney in 15 years. He hit the ball clean, usually where he was aiming and rarely got in trouble in blustery conditions for a 4-under 68, his lowest score to par in the first round of any tournament this year.

The last time he played bogey-free was the second round of the Dubai Desert Classic on Feb. 11.

“I hit it really good today,” Woods said. “It was rewarding that I hit the just like I have at home.” Even so, most of the fans following him missed all the excitement.

There was quite a buzz as Woods headed to the eighth tee. The gallery looked down the fairway on the 550-yard par 5 to see Scott celebrating a 6-iron from 220 yards downwind that landed 10 feet in front of the cup and went in for an albatross. That helped the Australian overcome a sloppy start and sent him to a 69.

It was his first albatross since he was 17 in the Greg Norman Junior Masters.

“That’s quite a while between drinks,” Scott said. “It gave me a boost, for sure. There were a lot of people there, and a lot of hands went in the air.”

Two groups behind Woods was Daly – where it all really kicked off of course.

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Associated Foreign Press
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