U.S. Open golf 2012: Tiger stays on first page of leaderboard at Olympic Club
The
U.S. Open leaderboard got a major shakeup early in Friday's second
round, which has opened a path for Tiger Woods to take a lead into the
weekend. (AP Photo)
SAN FRANCISCO—Tiger Woods has regained a share of the U.S. Open lead.
Woods birdied three of five holes to move into a tie with clubhouse
leader Jim Furyk at 1 under with four holes to play in a wild second
round Friday.
Furyk carded a 1-under 69 in the morning.
David Toms, also at 1-under, later joined Woods and Furyk as the only players with a red number.
Woods held a one-shot lead earlier in the round before three
straight bogeys sent him tumbling down the leaderboard. That's when
17-year-old qualifier Beau Hossler made birdie putts on two of three
holes to briefly take the lead before dropping three shots on two holes,
including a double on the par-4 fourth with a tee shot that landed
between towering trees.
Hossler, the kid from Rancho Santa Margarita down the California
coast, survived local and sectional qualifying at nearby Daly City, the
second straight year he sneaked into this major.
MORE U.S. OPEN COVERAGE:
Live leaderboard: Tiger Woods on the course at Olympic
GolfDigest.com: Local Knowledge blog
That's the kind of week it has been so far at The Olympic Club.
Michael Thompson, the leader after 18 holes, was 5 over for the day.
Top-ranked Luke Donald and defending champion Rory McIlroy were
likely going to miss the cut in what would be swift and stunning exits.
Donald came to the U.S. Open with six wins in the past 18 months,
more than any other player. Last year, the 34-year-old Englishman pulled
off an unprecedented feat by topping the money lists on both the PGA
and European tours.
Now he'll probably miss the weekend for the third time in nine U.S. Open starts.
Donald followed his birdie-free 79 — which even 14-year-old
qualifier Andy Zhang matched Thursday — with a less erratic second
round. He had five bogeys and three birdies to card a 72, leaving him at
an eye-popping 11 under and still without a major.
"That's the one part of my golfing resume in the last few years,
especially, that I need to continually address and continually improve,"
Donald said. "I want to win one more than any of you guys know."
McIlroy's slide might be even more startling.
He mixed five bogeys — including one on his final hole — with a pair
of birdies for a second-round 73. The 23-year-old from Northern Ireland
shattered U.S. Open records last June at rain-softened Congressional,
finishing at 268 to break the 72-hole record by four shots, and his
16-under total was four better than Woods' mark at Pebble Beach in 2000.
What a pushover that course turned out to be.
Olympic Club has restored "golf's toughest test" and then some.
The tight, twisting fairways on the unleveled Lake Course had most
of the field hacking out of rough and digging into sand for shots.
Others searched for balls in the colossal cypress trees or pushed putts
all over the rock-hard greens.
Sergio Garcia, who reached the green in two on the 11th, was so
upset when he missed a 5-foot putt to make bogey that he took a
half-swing at the ball and yelled a couple of cuss words.
The two accomplished left-handers in Woods' group, Mickelson and
Masters champion Bubba Watson also faced the prospect of missing the cut
entering the second round. Mickelson opened with a 76, and Watson shot
78.
At least they still had a round to play.
Calm and cool conditions under a light layer of fog provided a
majestic backdrop of San Francisco's steep hills when the first groups
teed off shortly after 7 a.m. A blue sky and warmer — but still crisp —
temperatures followed, speeding those already fast and fickle fairways.
It could be the last time most players enjoy the serene setting.
The U.S. Golf Association decided this year to eliminate the 10-shot
rule in which players within 10 strokes of the lead make the cut.
Starting at this year's championship, the cut will be the top 60 and
ties.
The cut line started was at 5 over or better when the first morning
groups finished. In all likelihood, it will be at least 7 over.
USGA executive director Mike Davis said the idea behind the new rule
was to limit the number of players making the cut — 108 did so Oakland
Hills in 1996 — and prevent slow play that could perhaps force a two-tee
start in threesomes.
Not that Woods will need to worry about that.
Woods was in control in the first round, finding fairways, sticking
greens and avoiding the thick rough and towering trees that line the
course built on the side of a hill that separates the Pacific Ocean from
Lake Merced. He had consecutive birdies late in his round, including a
35-foot putt that banged into the back of the cup on No. 5.

No comments:
Post a Comment