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Tiger vaults into lead
with 63
With no wind, there was
no need for Tiger Woods to play it safe today in the Memorial Tournament.
One day after he tiptoed
his way across Muirfield Village, Woods attacked a vulnerable course with a 9-under
63, closing with a chip-in for par and two tap-in birdies that gave him a one-stroke
lead over Harrison Frazar.
On a warm, lazy day at
Muirfield Village, Woods came to life with four straight birdies on the front
nine, and then really brought the gallery to its feet with a finish that put
him in great position to become the first repeat champion in the 25-year history
of the tournament.
After a delicate blast
from the sand barely climbed out of the bunker on the par-3 16th, he holed the
chip for par, pointing his finger at the cup as the ball disappeared.
A 9-iron into No. 17 stopped
a foot from the hole, and his 6-iron into the 18th spun back some 15 feet before
settling about 18 inches from the cup for another birdie.
Through 36 holes, Woods
was at 10-under 134.
``I hit a few solid shots,
made a few putts here and there, and it came out to 63,'' Woods said, shrugging
his shoulders with a smile.
The way he's been playing,
perhaps a 63 is rather routine.
Until then, the best round
of an easy day for scoring belonged to Ernie Els, who holed two bunker shots
for birdie in a round of 64 that shot him into contention at 7-under 137.
Because of a storm system
expected Saturday afternoon, the third round will feature threesomes going off
on both tees about three hours early with hopes of finishing around 3 p.m. CBS
Sports will televise the round on tape delay.
That puts Woods and Els
together again for the first time since their sensational, season-opening show
in Hawaii, where they each made eagle on the 72nd hole and Woods won on the second
playoff hole with a 40-foot birdie putt.
Els came close in the Masters,
then squandered a lead the next week at Hilton Head. He hasn't won in over a
year, but his game looks like it's rounding into form with the U.S. Open just
three weeks away.
``The way I'm playing,
I've got to think about winning now,'' Els said. ``I've got to go out there and
do my thing. I've got a lot of chances to come, but I'll try to take the first
chance that comes my way.''
Canadian Mike Weir (65)
was among five players at 5-under 139, while Gary Nicklaus played another solid
round (68) and was another stroke back, hopeful for a memorable weekend in the
tournament his father founded when Gary was still in grade school.
Jack Nicklaus, despite
bogeys on the final two holes, had a 73, but that was just enough to get in two
more rounds on the weekend.
Without the wind, Muirfield
played three strokes easier than the first round as 54 players broke par, compared
to just 18 on Thursday.
No one had a round quite
like Woods.
Frazar was already in with
a 69 and comfortably leading when Woods teed off.
``I saw some of the numbers
guys were putting up and I said, 'I'd like to get into the mix of that.' And
I was able to do that,'' Woods said. ``You could go ahead and attack.''
It began with four straight
birdies, starting on the par-5 fifth. Wood missed a 4-foot birdie on the par-5
11th, but that only seemed to get him going as his irons began tracking to the
flags like lasers.
``I've always been a player
who could string shots together,'' Woods said. ``Once I get going, I tend to
keep it going.''
His only threat of bogey
came on No. 16, where a nearly perfect bunker shot came up 6 inches short of
its intended target and stayed in the first cut.
``I figured I had some
pretty good luck around this golf course chipping in,'' said Woods, who holed
a chip in the final round last year on his way to a two-stroke victory. ``I figured
I might as well chip this in.''
Woods and Els will also
get the company of Frazar, who had it at 10 under until a bogey late in the round
dropped him to 135.
Frazar gave up golf after
college because he figured if he couldn't beat his childhood pal and University
of Texas roommate - Justin Leonard - then how was he going to compete against
the best in the world?
``I didn't know that he
(Leonard) was going to become one of the best players in the world,'' Frazar
said.
Frazar left the real estate
development business, went from the Nike Tour to the big leagues in two years
and has proven to himself that he finally belongs. One thing that has helped
is hanging out with proven stars - Leonard, Davis Love III, Fred Couples.
``You want to go to dinner
with people that are talking about the putts they made, not the ones they missed,''
Frazar said. ``You want to go to dinner with people that are talking about what
it felt like when they won a tournament, not when they fell apart and missed
the cut.''
In that case, he can't
argue with who will join him for brunch on the first tee Saturday.
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