CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Tiger Woods may be playing the Wells Fargo Championship for the first time in six years, but he wasn’t the only member of his pro-am group who was in the spotlight Wednesday. Shahbaz Hashmi, a high-school senior from Alamo Heights, Texas, got to play with Woods after winning an essay contest conducted by Wells Fargo and The First Tee. Hashmi impressed with his game (he’s a +0.9 handicap) and his composure. Ashami hit a long tee shot down the 18th fairway, then almost made birdie after hitting his approach shot to 20 feet. He shared the podium with Woods in his post-round press conference and even fulfilled an autograph request after finishing his round. “Shahbaz, he did fantastically today,� Woods said. “Some of the shots he hit today, the flight of some of the drives he hit was penetrating and solid, especially after the wind came up. He piped the drive down 18.� Hashmi, a 12-year participant in The First Tee of San Antonio got to pick his playing partner Wednesday. It was an easy decision. “Tiger Woods is unequivocally my hero,� he said. “Watching him dominate in a way no other athlete has in their respective sport has served as such an inspiration for not only me but my entire generation.� Woods owns 79 PGA TOUR victories. Hashmi has an impressive resume of his own. He is the president of The First Tee of San Antonio’s junior advisory board and mentors younger participants in the program. He speaks three languages (French, Uru/Hindi and English) and wants to study international monetary policy and foreign relations in college. He has a 4.0 grade-point average. Hashmi carried his own bag in Wednesday’s pro-am and made sure to capture plenty of photos and videos of the round. He stood in the middle of the 16th fairway, about 10 yards behind Woods, as Woods hit his approach shot. The amateur tees were some 70 yards ahead of the back tees on the par-3 17th, but Hashmi made the trek bto watch Woods tee off. Like the rest of Woods’ gallery, Ashami held his phone aloft as Woods hit his shot. Ashami said Woods’ advice helped him hit that impressive tee shot on the last hole. “He said his father told him that, with driver in hand, he could swing as hard as he wanted as long as he could hit the center of the clubface and hold his finish until the ball landed,� Ashami said. “Coming in, I was just holding my finish to the best of my ability. On the back nine, I was striping it off the tee and with the irons.� He drew a “Nice shot there� from Woods after hitting his approach shot to 20 feet. He barely missed the birdie putt. It would’ve been the perfect ending to the perfect day. “I can’t say one thing I was impressed by because I was impressed by all of it,� Ashami said. This will be Woods’ seventh start at the Wells Fargo Championship. He finished no worse than 11th in his first four trips here, including a win in 2007, but missed the cut in his past two trips to Charlotte (2010, 12). Woods is scheduled to tee off at 12:50 p.m. Thursday with Brooks Koepka and newly-minted Masters champion Patrick Reed. Woods will see a new course after modifications were made for last year’s PGA Championship. Changes include combining the first two holes to make a long par-4 and a new par-3 fourth hole. “The golf course is much harder than it used to be, that’s for sure,� Woods said. “Some of these holes have become a lot more stout. The bunkers are certainly more in play than they used to be and the greens are new so they’re a little more springy.� This will be Woods’ first start since a disappointing 32nd-place finish at the Masters. Woods arrived at Augusta National after having opportunities to win his preceding two starts, but poor iron play kept him from contending at a course where he has won four times. A final-round 69 was his only under-par round of the week. Woods took 10 days off after Augusta National. He is scheduled to play this week and next week’s THE PLAYERS Championship. It will be just his second appearance at TPC Sawgrass since his win in 2013. He finished T69 at the 2015 PLAYERS. “Hopefully I can have everything peak for this week and next week� Woods said.
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