Saturday, June 23, 2001
Rain prevents third round from
going off at Buick Classic
By JOEL STASHENKO
Associated Press Writer
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) It might take
a few days to find out if Tiger Woods can come from behind
very far behind to win the Buick Classic.
Heavy rain left parts of the already soggy
Westchester Country Club under water Saturday, forcing postponement
of the third round.
If the round can be played Sunday
there was more rain in the forecast, plus fog officials
said they'd complete the tournament on Monday. But PGA tournament
director Slugger White said a Tuesday finish was not out of the
question.
Sergio Garcia and Scott Hoch were tied for
the second-round lead at 7-under 135, one shot ahead of Mark Wiebe.
Woods, who avoided the cut by shooting a 5-under 66 in the second
round he completed Friday, was tied for 30th six shots
back.
Garcia birdied the last two of the eight
holes of the second round he had left to complete early Saturday
and finished with a 67. Hoch birdied No. 18, the ninth hole he
had remaining Saturday, to complete a 68.
Seventy-five golfers finished their second
rounds under leaden, but dry, skies early Saturday. As the first
golfers prepared to head out to the first and 10th tees to begin
the third round, a heavy, hour-long rain saturated the course.
It was incredible, White said.
We got an inch of rain in, what? An hour? It was pretty
devastating.
That was on top of the two long rainstorms
which forced the suspension of Thursday's opening round and first
caused havoc with this tournament's schedule.
Garcia's experience has been typical of
most players. He got in 17 holes Thursday but had to be on the
tee at 7 a.m. Friday to finish up his opening round. After a wait
of 10 hours, he returned to the course Friday evening to play
10 holes before play was halted by darkness.
Back on the tee at 7 a.m. Saturday, Garcia
finished up the last eight holes of the second round.
Garcia said following the long week of the
U.S. Open where he shot himself out of contention with
a final-round 77 the rain at the Buick Classic has been
a grind.
In fact, Garcia has never experienced a
tournament where weather has caused so many problems.
We're almost thinking about playing
Tuesday, he said. It's kind of weird to be thinking
about that.
Doubts about playing 72 holes make holding
the 54-hole lead especially important, Garcia said.
Of course, you always try to be leading
after every round, he said. But tomorrow, you have
to have it in the back of your mind just in case.
The cut came at 2-over 144, meaning that
Woods was in real danger of missing his first cut in 71 tour events
after an opening round of 75 Friday morning. He immediately went
back on the course for the second round, however, and posted the
best second-round score along with Tripp Isenhour, Jerry Smith
and Bob Tway.
Tway still missed the cut by three shots,
despite his 66. He deserved some award for persistence, however,
for playing in a second round after the nightmarish 81 he had
in the first.
Tway took 39 putts in that round. For his
last 12 holes, he had a double bogey followed by six bogeys, a
par and then four more bogeys.
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