Saturday, August 26, 2000
The amazing Tiger Woods show
continues
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
AKRON, Ohio (AP) The major championships
are done for the year.
Tiger Woods is not.
Just five days after winning his third consecutive
major in record fashion, Woods once again found himself playing
in a different tournament than everyone else, and certainly playing
a different game.
He flirted with a 59 for the second day
in a row. He became only the fourth man in competition to reach
the 625-yard 16th in two. And he walked off Firestone Country
Club by matching one record, breaking another and not even knowing
it.
Woods had a 9-under 61 to tie the course
record set by Jose Maria Olazabal in 1990, and his 125 set a new
standard on the PGA Tour for 36 holes.
What does it all mean?
It's taking a lot more under par to
win the tournaments now, said Phil Mickelson, who had a
66 and goes into the weekend trying to make up a seven-shot deficit.
Woods pumped his fist and smiled when his
6-foot par putt on the 18th disappeared into the cup, as if he
were aware there were records at stake.
Not true.
I didn't want to finish with a bogey
for the second day in a row, he said. I'm just trying
to hit good, solid shots. I just want to get the `W.'
That shouldn't be too difficult.
The seven-stroke lead is the largest of
his career, and the largest on tour since Olazabal led by nine
strokes at Firestone in 1990 in what was then the World Series
of Golf. His 125 broke the record of 126 previously held by six
players it was first set by Tommy Bolt in the 1954 Virginia
Beach Open, and last matched by David Frost in the 1999 St. Jude
Classic.
Only four other players have had a 125 in
consecutive rounds, but not the first two.
He's been playing so well, it's not
like we're in shock, said Jim Furyk, who played with Woods
on Friday or at least walked in the same fairway as Woods.
Mickelson finished one stroke behind Woods
in the NEC Invitational last year. And while Woods appears invincible
this week, Mickelson wasn't about to declare the tournament over.
A little disappointing you would even
bring that up, said Mickelson, who had a 66. One of
my thought processes was, 'Listen, if I can make some birdies,
I can get in the final group.' I think there's some real benefits
to that.
Justin Leonard had a 67 and was at 133,
while Furyk had a 69 and was another stroke back. Woods had a
six-stroke lead after 36 holes in the U.S. Open, and went on to
win by 15. He led by three strokes at the halfway mark of the
British Open and won by eight.
The 37-man field is for Presidents Cup and
U.S. Ryder Cup team members, plus the top 12 Europeans from the
European tour money list. It is a small gathering of elite players,
but Woods is in a class by himself.
His approach shots hit their mark as easily
as a someone shooting free throw. Drives were long and shaped
perfectly down the tree-lined fairways of Firestone. Woods played
out the shots in his mind, and executed them to near perfection.
You have an idea of where you want
to put the golf ball, he said. When you're able to
do that, that's when the game looks easy.
Proof of that came on No. 16, a 625-yard
hole known as The Monster. In the first round, Woods
nailed his drive but decided against going for the green from
285 yards away. He also noticed that a little more to the right,
and his drive would catch a slope.
So on Friday, he aimed a little more right,
caught the slope and wound up only 269 yards from the pin.
Go for it, screamed the gallery,
perhaps aware that only three players have ever reached the green
in two during competition Arnold Palmer, Raymond Floyd
and John Daly.
Make it four.
Woods caught his 2-iron as pure as can be,
slapped hands with caddie Steve Williams and watched as the ball
landed 8 feet directly behind the flag, then bounced twice into
thick ground behind the green.
I only had 256 to carry, which I know
I can hit that if I hit it solid, Woods said. The
hard part was a slight downhill lie, which meant that I really
had to stay committed to the shot, and possibly even release it
a little early to get some more loft on it. I hit it flush.
His chip grazed the lip of the cup for a
tap-in birdie.
That epitomized the entire round. Mickelson
had the lead early on with a birdie-eagle start, but that didn't
last long. Woods hit an 8-iron from a 176 yards into the par-5
second hole and made the 12-footer for eagle, then birdied three
straight starting on No. 4 to leave everyone else in his wake.
Phenomenal, said Colin Montgomerie.
I can only see that gap widening.
That was the case Friday at Firestone. That's
been the case all year.
Woods has had at least a share of the lead
in his last six rounds, and 16 of his last 25 dating to the second
round of the Memorial. It also was his 29th consecutive round
at par or better, the longest streak since the PGA Tour began
keeping such statistics in 1980.
When will it end?
I really don't feel it is a streak,
Woods said. I feel like I'm just playing well. I think if
I work hard and have a lot of patience and manage my game well,
I can play this game at a high level for a long period of time.
Since the next major isn't until the Masters
in April, perhaps the next feat in front of Woods is a 59
or lower. For the second day in a row, he gave himself a chance,
and the gallery was egging him on.
Fifty-nine! they shouted as
he walked down the 13th fairway, 8 under through his first 12
holes and needing three birdies on his final six holes to reach
the magic number. Woods said he never heard them, and a 59 never
crossed his mind.
What people? he asked innocently.
I had no clue how many under par I was. At the time, I think
I had a five- or six-shot lead. I just tried to increase that.
With a 10-foot birdie on the 17th, Woods
had a chance to break the course record. But his drive on the
18th took one last roll into thick rough, and his approach landed
over the flag and ran through the green.
A 61 was the best he could manage.
Then again, he still has two rounds left.
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