Russell Henley leads world No.1 Scottie Scheffler by two strokes after the opening round of the Tour Championship at East Lakes Golf Club.
In the first round of the FedEx Cup playoff finale on Thursday, most of the 30-player field excelled at the historic course.
Henley made three consecutive birdies to end the round.
World No.1 and defending champion Scottie Scheffler is just two strokes behind at seven-under 63.
Collin Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas, Robert MacIntrye of Scotland and Englishman Tommy Fleetwood are three strokes back at six-under 64 on a crowded leaderboard.
In total, 22 players were under par, six players were even and just two players were over par. The combined score of the field was 82 under par.
Perhaps it was the heavy rain that pummeled the Atlanta area on Tuesday and Wednesday that helped the golfers. The opening round was played under preferred lies rules due to evening downpours. This allowed balls on the fairways or other closely mown areas to be lifted, cleaned and placed in a preferred spot.
The course was set up to be more challenging with pins tucked in corners of the greens, but as it turned out, that didn't matter.
"Just with conditions right now, flags barely moving and it's rained a lot over the last day, so things that you can't control," Morikawa said. "It's just Mother Nature. When conditions are like that, we're going to be firing at pins. That's just the nature of what we do.
"Lift, clean and place, you've got a lot of wedges on this golf course. Can't really do much to tuck (pins) away because even if you do tuck them in corners, we're firing away with a wedge."
Henley finished with seven birdies and an eagle at No.6. Five of his birdies came on the back nine, including the final three holes. Henley made a total of 207 feet, four inches worth of putts on the round.
"Just felt like I was at peace if I missed," Henley said of his putting. "I felt like I was clear on my reads.
"Last week, I felt like I played really well and didn't give myself a bunch of looks because I couldn't figure out how far the ball was going and struggled a little bit on the looks of those greens, getting the reads down.
"Just felt a little more clear in my mind on what I thought the ball was going to do and just felt like, yeah, at peace if I missed it. Just kind of free-wheeled it a little bit."
Northern Ireland star Rory McIlroy, who entered second in the points standings and played in the final pairing with Scheffler, was in a group tied for eighth at four under.
Akshay Bhatia, the last man in the 30-player field, joined him along with Ludvig Aberg of Sweden and Ben Griffin.
Maverick McNealy (one-over 71) and Austria's Sepp Straka (four-over 74) were the only golfers not to beat par.
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