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Love leads once again
at Harbour Town
If Davis Love III has a
secret about playing at Harbour Town, he's not telling.
"Guys are kind of like,
'Well, what is he doing? Here he goes again. How does he do it?"' said Love,
whose 5-under-par 66 today lifted him -- again -- into the lead after two rounds
of the MCI Classic. "You can tell that maybe they think I know something that
they don't. But I don't."
Love, a four-time champion
in this event, looked every bit at home as he does in nearby Sea Island, Ga.,
cutting through cold, damp conditions to move a stroke ahead of Ernie Els.
Els, second at the Masters
last week, shot a 67 and was at 135.
Steve Lowery had a 7-under
64 and was three strokes off the lead with Notah Begay and first-round leader
Dan Forsman. Begay, with a 66, and Forsman, with a 71, both played in the afternoon
as a steady, sometimes heavy, rain cleared the course of everyone but the golfers.
Masters champion Vijay
Singh briefly moved within a shot of Love midway through the round. But Singh
had three bogeys on the back nine to fall to his second straight 70 and was six
shots behind.
Defending champion Glen
Day followed his opening 74 with a 69.
Love is as overwhelming
a favorite at Harbour Town as Tiger Woods seems to be at most other courses.
His four victories are an MCI record, as is the $941,533 he has won here. He
broke 70 in eight of his last 10 tournament rounds.
"It is kind of strange
that for some reason after the Masters I always come here and play well," Love
said. Players "have asked me a lot, 'How do you play this hole?' or 'How do you
play that hole?"'
Maybe that's why Els, grouped
with Love the first two rounds, was the closest to the leader.
"Davis knows this place
pretty well," said Els, whose best MCI finish was a 10th two years ago. "So I
just kind of followed him around today."
In Els' up-close view,
Love's only poor swing in 36 holes was a sideways 3-wood that flew into the marsh
off the 18th green on Thursday and led to a double-bogey 6.
"I don't think 'mad at
myself' is strong enough" to say how he felt closing Thursday's round, Love said.
But Love relied on his
history and passion for Harbour Town and was rewarded with the lead. His round
included a remarkable eagle at the par-4 16th and a birdie on 18 that "probably
felt like an eagle," Love said.
Love's move began on 16
when his 9-iron from 130 yards took two bounces and disappeared "like a rabbit
in a hole," he said.
After missing a 17-foot
birdie putt on 17, Love stood over a similar approach shot on 18 that he had
sent off line a day earlier. This time, he drilled a 4-iron straight and true
within eight feet and rolled in the putt.
A 15-foot birdie putt on
his final hole, the ninth, left Love in a very familiar position.
"He looks very comfortable
out there," Els said. "He plays the safe shot off the tee and he knows where
the greens are running to."
Els kept himself close
with consecutive birdies to start his back nine. He saved a tricky 8-footer for
par on the last hole after Love had knocked in his birdie.
Lowery, whose only PGA
Tour victory came six years ago, had birdies on four of his first five holes
and three of his last four for the lowest round of the tournament after shooting
an opening 73. Why the improvement? Lowery shrugged.
"I could beat anybody today
and yesterday couldn't beat anybody," he said. "That's golf."
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