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Els moves two shots clear
Don't be fooled by the nickname.
When Ernie Els is on his game, the Big Easy likes a golf course to play as difficult
as possible.
That's what he got Friday
on the Blue Monster at Doral, and Els delivered a command performance. He had
another bogey-free round with a 5-under 67, giving him a two-stroke lead over
Briny Baird in the Genuity Championship.
``You had to play pretty
well to break 70,'' he said. ``Hopefully, it will stay that way.''
Tiger Woods didn't break
70, but he finally managed to break par in a second round. An adventurous day
of five birdies and three bogeys (70) left him only four strokes behind, in serious
contention after 36 holes for the first time this year.
``In these conditions, if
you let your mind wander you can make 5, 6, 7 in a heartbeat out here, especially
with as much water as this golf course has,'' Woods said. ``You've got to be really
committed to what you're doing.''
Els was at 11-under 133,
amazing considering he was among the late starters and the course played two strokes
more difficult than the opening round. Gusts were 25 mph, enough to bend flagsticks
and allow the Blue Monster to show its teeth.
-- Chris DiMarco, the first-round
lead at 65, played the final four holes in 5-over-par and finished with a 79.
He narrowly made it to the weekend.
-- Davis Love III took a
quintuple-bogey 9 on the par-4 third hole. He missed the cut, shooting a 77 for
a 147 total.
-- British Open champion
David Duval made only three pars in his first 10 holes, had a 73 and missed the
cut for the first time since last year at Pebble Beach. Duval came to Doral having
broken par in every round this year. He left with rounds of 72-73.
-- Ty Tryon kept his streak
going. The 17-year-old has yet to break par as a professional, posting a 77 to
miss the cut.
``I felt like conditions
were pretty tough, but I was looking forward to it,'' Els said. ``I just think
the golf course needs a bit of breeze and a bit of wind to make it a little bit
more difficult for the players.
``It gives the guys that
are really playing well an opportunity to show that they are playing good.''
Els took control on the
back nine. He made birdies on three of his first four holes, including an 18-foot
chip-in for birdie. He missed six greens Friday, but usually in the right place
from which to save par.
Els is the only player in
the field that has not made a bogey. He kept that alive by getting up-and-down
from thick rough behind the 18th green.
Baird had a 66 and will
be in the final group Saturday in his hometown. He described his round as ``virtually
flawless,'' and it was tough to disagree -- no bogeys, no par putts longer than
3 feet and the lowest round of the day. Having grown up in Miami, he allowed himself
a look at the leaderboard stationed in the middle of the pond on the 18th hole,
his name at the top Friday morning before Els teed off.
``I didn't sit back and
scratch my head and say, 'Wow, man, I'm leading the tour event.' But I thought
this was nice. This is what you play for, and this is where you want to be. Now,
let's see what we can do from here.''
That what Els wants to find
out, too. A two-time U.S. Open champion, he failed to win on the PGA Tour last
year for the first time since 1994.
``I'll just try and do it
this week,'' he said. ``And if not this week, then the next week. I just feel
like I'm playing good enough. Hopefully, it's a matter of time.''
Still, there are 36 holes
remaining -- and one big cat in his rearview mirror. Els gave a hint that he was
aware of Woods' presence when he mentioned the score, but not the name.
``I've got a two-shot lead
and a four-shot lead on third place,'' he said. ``I played pretty well in these
kind of conditions today. Can I do it again? Hopefully, I can.''
Joining Woods at 137 was
former British Open champion Justin Leonard, Rich Beem, Skip Kendall and Peter
Lonard of Australia.
Woods' round included one
of the wildest shots he has produced in some time, a flier out of the rough on
No. 18. The ball clanged off the top of the grandstand, and Woods managed a smile
only after it streaked across the green and stopped short of going into the water.
``I didn't know how it was
going to come out,'' Woods said. ``I didn't mean to fly it to the grandstand.''
Divots
Woods' previous second-round
scores this year were a 74 at Kapalua, a 73 in the New Zealand Open, 73 at the
Pebble Beach National Pro-Am and a 77 at the Buick Invitational. There was no
second round last week when he was eliminated in the first round of the Match
Play Championship. ... Baird, who used to carry a scoreboard at Doral when he
was a teen-ager, realized the kid in his threesome hasn't been at it very long.
``It's seniority. You look for the biggest name you can find and take that group,''
he said. ``He obviously hasn't done it very often to get stuck with our group.
It's not a group that you would be like, 'Oh, yeah, Briny Baird, (Brad) Elder,
(Brandel) Chamblee.' You won't be excited about that group.'' Baird was a standardbearer
one year,and got Dick Mast.
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