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Lehman & Sutton take
up challenge
The TPC at Sawgrass was
just a pup in 1983. So was Hal Sutton.
He was a rising star, regarded
as the next Jack Nicklaus when he won The Players Championship and added his
first major that summer in the PGA Championship. Seventeen years later, the course
and the player seem to be getting better with age.
Sutton kept his cool in
the face of adversity, building momentum from an improbable bogey and surging
to another 3-under 69 today that gave him a one-stroke lead over Tom Lehman and
Omar Uresti after two rounds.
"I'm a lot better player
than I was in 1983," said Sutton, who was at 6-under 138. "There is a lot of
better players on the tour now than there was then, too. I don't take anything
for granted anymore."
That's a good thing.
Sutton and Lehman were
indignant over talk that Tiger Woods couldn't be beaten, and perhaps it was just
a coincidence that over two tough days on the Stadium Course, they looked as
though they wanted to prove their point.
Still, Woods lurked just
four strokes back, despite his second double bogey in as many days, despite the
fact he failed again to break 70 for the 14th straight round in The Players Championship.
"I said this earlier in
the week and I'll say it again: The only person I can control is myself," Sutton
said. "I'm just doing the best I can with me."
That was plenty on a sunny,
breezy day on which the greens were a little more receptive, even though the
course was no less punishing.
Fulton Allem had a 7-under
65, the best score here since the late Payne Stewart had a 65 in the final round
two years ago, to finish at 4-under 140.
Woods birdied all the par-5s,
including his last one at No. 9, for a 1-under 71 that put him at 142, along
with Len Mattiace (71) and two-time U.S. Open champion Ernie Els (69).
"Sometimes you get bad
breaks," said Woods, who got just that when his drive landed in a canyon-like
divot on No. 4 that led to a double bogey. "But I'm right there in the hunt,
and that's where you want to be."
The course played nearly
two strokes easier than the day before, evidenced by the 31 players who broke
par compared with just 15 in the first round.
But it could still take
a chunk out of anyone, any time. Defending champion David Duval made five birdies
to go along with a triple bogey on the par-3 eighth and a watery double bogey
on No. 18 for a 73. He was at 4-over 148.
The cut was at 6-over 150,
the highest mark since 1983. If Sutton can win again, he might look back fondly
on the 18th hole today.
He pulled his drive into
the water, took a drop and then watched in disbelief as his ball barely climbed
over the thick rough at the water's edge. Sutton chopped out to 12 feet and made
the putt for bogey.
"Making that putt was a
big key," he said.
Lehman had a relatively
quiet 68, hitting a 4-iron into the par-5 second and 11th holes for two-putt
birdies, and then a 5-iron from 207 yards into 18 feet for eagle on No. 16. Like
Sutton, he saved the day with a crucial putt on No. 18.
He left his approach in
the grassy mound right of the green, chipped 15 feet past the hole and made his
putt for par.
"There's no reason why
any number of guys can't win here," Lehman said. "I expect Tiger Woods to play
great. I expect Tom Lehman to play great. I expect Ernie Els to play great. You
have to give yourself enough credit to go out and do your best.
"If I didn't think I was
capable of winning, I wouldn't be out here."
Several notable players
won't get that chance. Phil Mickelson improved 12 strokes today, but since he
started with an 83, he'll have to leave early. So will Sergio Garcia, who went
82-72 and also missed the cut.
Uresti and Allem were among
the 21 players who failed to complete the first round Thursday because of darkness.
They returned this morning and made bogey on their first hole, which spurred
them on for the rest of the day.
But for different reasons.
Uresti's first shot of
the day was on the island-green 17th, and he promptly dumped it in the water.
But he hit a sand wedge from the drop area to 4 feet and made the putt for bogey.
"That kind of got my day
going, at least a halfway decent direction," he said.
Uresti made just about
every putt that mattered, taking only one putt on his first five greens of the
second round. He also added a 30-foot birdie on his 15th hole, the fifth putt
of 30 feet or longer he has holed this week. He had a 68.
The putter has never been
the most reliable club in Allem's bag, and he was about ready to break it after
a three-putt on the 18th to finish off the first round.
"I said, 'Here you are.
For the last 10 years, all you've done is putt like an absolute idiot,' " Allem
said.
So, he replaced the club
with a collector's Ping Scottsdale that he bought for $2,500 in 1993 at Firestone
Country Club. He won the World Series of Golf that week.
Where has it been all this
time?
"Hey, golfers do strange
things, my friend," Allem said.
The way the first two days
have gone, The Players Championship is ripe for a strange weekend
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