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JP Hayes moves into
a one shot lead
Heron Bay's trademark wind
was back today, but several players continued to breeze through the Honda Classic.
J.P. Hayes shot a second-round
67 and moved to 12-under-par, one stroke ahead of David Sutherland and Hal Sutton.
Rick Fehr, Paraguay's Carlos
Franco, Dudley Hart, Skip Kendall, and Kevin Wentworth were at 10-under.
"There is a tremendous
amount of golf left," Hayes, 34, said. "Who knows what the weekend weather is
going to bring us. There is a ton of guys within three or four or five shots
of the lead, but ... I would like to think that I am going to have a chance on
Sunday afternoon."
Only 17 players in the
144-man field were over par after the second round at the Tournament Players
Club at Heron Bay. The cut was 4-under, most notably sending Franklin Langham
-- last week's runner-up in the Doral-Ryder Open -- home for the weekend.
The cut is the lowest on
tour this year and matched the lowest in the 28-year history of the tournament.
Davis Love III, the highest-ranked
player in the event, and Stuart Appleby were 7-under, and Bernhard Langer and
defending champion Vijay Singh were 5-under headed into the weekend.
"I don't think I played
that much better, but I'm making progress," said Love, who shot a 68 today to
become one of 39 players within five strokes of the leader.
Hayes, whose only PGA Tour
victory was the 1998 Buick Classic, had seven birdies and two bogeys today. He
was deadlocked with Sutherland and Sutton until he birdied the par-5 ninth hole.
"You would really have
to have a four- or five-shot lead to feel any kind of momentum or confidence
that you have a really good chance to win because so many things can happen and
there are so many good players," Hayes said.
After a PGA Tour-record
eight players tied for the opening-round lead at 7-under, tour officials did
all they could today to keep the scores from reaching record lows.
They moved the tees back
and placed the pins in tougher-to-reach positions, tucking many of them behind
greenside bunkers.
"This is the PGA Tour;
they are going to find edges," Sutton said. "I expect them to do that. It was
playing quite bit more difficult today. There were tough pins that were hard
to get at and the tees that were up yesterday ... they didn't have them up today.
They had them all back."
The extra wind did an equal
amount of damage.
Wind which subsided for
most of the opening round was back today, gusting to 15 mph. And strong wind
equals hard greens, which make for tougher putting.
"The wind was blowing just
a little bit harder today," Kendall said. "It did play a lot more difficult.
It was impossible to get the ball close. You'd land five feet short of the hole
and it would go all the way to the back edge. You had no chance.
"Just the way it played,
the way the wind was, you had to take what you could get."
Sutherland, who carded
a rare double eagle Thursday, and Sutton shot 66s today. Sutherland birdied No.
14, doubling his score on the par-5 hole from the previous day.
"Part of me says this could
be my week," said Sutherland, whose double eagle was his first ever and the first
on tour this year. "But then again, I've gotten a hole-in-one and missed the
cut before."
Sutton, a PGA Tour veteran
and member of last year's winning U.S. Ryder Cup team, had a bogey-free round.
Casey Martin shot an even-par
72 today and remained 6-under. Martin, the first player to use a cart on tour,
triple-bogeyed No. 18, the fifth-toughest finishing hole on tour last year.
The 27-year-old Martin,
who has a rare circulatory condition in his right leg that makes it difficult
for him to walk 18 holes, drove his tee shot into a fairway bunker, then took
two shots to get out of the sand.
His third shot landed behind
a bush in a waste bunker just next to the green. He punched out to just in front
of the green. Then he chipped onto the green and two-putted from 10 feet.
"I played 17 really good
holes and then one really bad one," Martin said. "It was pretty easy to do, but
it came at a bad time when I was darn near leading the tournament. It stings,
but I hope to learn from it and never do it again ever. Ever."
Martin started on the back
nine and was 9-under before the 18th.
He rebounded with a birdie
on the par-5 No. 4 and just missed birdie putts on Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 9.
DIVOTS: Australian
teen sensation Aaron Baddeley, who will turn 19 on March 17, shot a 4-under 68
and easily made the cut at 7-under. Baddeley, the 1999 Australian Open winner,
is the only amateur playing in the event. ... Franco said the tendinitis in his
left wrist is getting worse. ... Kendall didn't arrive in South Florida until
Wednesday night, just hours before his tee time in the opening round. ... John
Daly was 5-under and drawing some of the largest galleries.
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