The Daily Wrap-up: Round 2, the Memorial Tournament

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Jonathan Byrd
Lyons/Getty Images
Jonathan Byrd had four birdies and no bogeys in a round of 68 Friday that moved him into a tie for the lead at the Memorial.
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Jun. 5, 2009

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) -- Jim Furyk made one last birdie to put him one more stroke under par, which he found more gratifying than being in a share of the lead with Jonathan Byrd on Friday at the Memorial Tournament.

A blue sky and a warm sun translated into fast greens at Muirfield Village, leading to a crammed leaderboard going into a weekend loaded with possibilities.

Tiger Woods had his worst score in nearly two years -- a 2-over 74 -- and still was only six shots behind.

Furyk had two bogeys from the bunker on the back nine, but finished with an 8-iron that stopped on the top shelf about 8 feet away for birdie on the 18th that gave him a 2-under 70. He hasn't been atop the leaderboard this deep into a tournament since winning the RBC Canadian Open in 2007, his last PGA TOUR victory.

Byrd had a bogey-free 68 in the morning, also making a birdie on the 18th.

They were at 7-under 137.

Asked how he felt about being tied for the lead, Furyk replied, "I'd rather be as many under par as possible."

"I just want to go out there and play one more solid round tomorrow and hopefully sit in the same spot, and put myself in good position for Sunday's round," said Furyk, the 2002 Memorial Tournament winner. "I'll just be jockeying for position and trying to play another good round."

And he'll have plenty of company.

Mike Weir (69) and Mark Wilson (70) were another shot back at 6-under 138. The top 16 players were separated by a mere three shots going into the weekend.

Woods was not among that group, but came away from a pedestrian round with a fighting chance.

He missed only two of the generous fairways in the second round, but bogeys kept piling up with shots that were just enough long or short to present problems. He went long on the 18th hole into rough and had no hope of getting the ball closer than 30 feet. And on the par-5 fifth, he came up short and in the water, compounding the error by missing a par putt inside 4 feet.

"If you're missing it on the short side, you're not going to make pars here," Woods said after the 74, his highest score since the second round of the U.S. Open at Oakmont. "You have to make sure you hit the ball on the correct side. I didn't do that today."

Woods was at 1-under 143. That was only six shots from the lead with 36 holes to play, although he had 23 players ahead of him, a list that includes Ernie Els (70), Stewart Cink (72) and Davis Love III (68) at 4-under 140.

A victory by Love would allow him to skip 36 holes of U.S. Open qualifying on Monday.

Also at 140 was Luke Donald, who opened with a 64 and a three-shot lead that vanished with a 40 on his opening nine. He wound up a dozen shots worse with a 76, although he was very much in contention.

The question was whether the leading score would continue to dwindle as the greens got even faster.

Woods said he ran into the course superintendent before teeing off in the morning and was told the greens were running at 14 on the Stimpmeter. "That's not slow," he said.

"If you're putting uphill for birdies or pars, it doesn't look that hard," Love said. "If you're putting down hill all day, which you can easily do, or you're hitting it over the greens and chipping back, it's tough."

Els continues to struggle with the putter, missing three birdie chances inside 8 feet. He made it easy on himself at the end of the round, holing a bunker shot at No. 9 for birdie that put him in the mix.

Furyk made all three of his bogeys from a bunker, but he atoned for that with enough quality shots to share the lead. Among his more impressive birdies was a 3-iron to about 10 feet on the par-3 fourth hole, especially because it was above the hole.

"One of those you just breathe on it and hit the right line," he said.

Byrd failed to make birdie on any of the par 5s, but the disappointment was soothed by keeping bogeys off his card. He realized the course was getting tougher, and he welcomed a chance to show his mettle on the weekend.

"We're halfway home on this golf tournament. There's a lot left," Byrd said. "The course is going to get more difficult and a lot faster, which I'm prepared for. I feel my game is sharp enough to suit tougher conditions."

Other notables at the Memorial Tournament
Name Score Position Comment Saturday tee time (ET)
Mike Weir 6 under T3 One of three players among the top 16 names on the board to shoot two straight rounds in the 60s, Weir is looking for his first win since '07. 1:30 p.m.
Ernie Els 4 under T7 The Big Easy won here in 2004, has nine career top-15 finishes and is in good position again after tying for most greens in regulation so far. 1 p.m.
Stewart Cink 4 under T7 Cink hasn't hit a lot of fairways this week, but his GIR is nearly 70 percent. Add in some solid putting and he's in good shape. 1 p.m.
Davis Love III 4 under T7 The 20-time PGA TOUR winner has never won at Murifield Village, but he's in contention after a 68 Friday left him just three back. 12:30 p.m.
Tiger Woods 1 under T24 Woods hit nearly the same number of fairways and greens in Round 2, but he had five bogeys in his worst round in nearly two years. 11:42 a.m.
Friday's Best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The 563-yard par-5 seventh hole was easiest with a Friday scoring average of 4.462.
EAGLES: 5 BIRDIES: 58 PARS: 49
BOGEYS: 5 OTHERS: 0
The 471-yard par-4 10th hole was toughest with a Friday scoring average of 4.410.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 7 PARS: 62
BOGEYS: 42 OTHERS: 6
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
Camilo Villegas chipped in to save par on the 18th hole, helping him salvage a round of 73 Friday. Watch his shot Jonathan Byrd had four birdies and no bogeys Friday as his 68 helped move him into a share of the lead. Check out his scorecard

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH THE PGA TOUR NETWORK
PGA TOUR Network correspondent Mark Carnevale offers these observations from Friday's action. Listen to PGA TOUR Live coverage on XM 146/SIRIUS 209 or right here at PGATOUR.COM.

xmcarnevale.jpg

As I indicated yesterday, Muirfield Village Golf Club bit back in Round 2 as most of the players at the top of the leaderboard backed up in the second round. Numerous players, including No. 1-ranked Tiger Woods, felt the green speeds were equal to Augusta National -- possibly reaching as high as 15 on the Stimpmeter. Tiger, who is driving the ball well with 25 of 28 fairways hit, has struggled with putting and hitting greens in regulation. He posted a 2-over round of 74 Friday and now sits at 1 under heading into the final 36 holes.

Ernie Els, the winner at The Memorial Tournament in 2004, spent Thursday evening in the practice bunker working on his sand play. It certainly paid off as he was 3 for 4 in sand saves for his second round, including holing out on the ninth hole (his 18th of the day) for birdie for back-to-back rounds of 70 to put him at 4 under going into the weekend.

Jonathan Byrd, with rounds of 69 and 68, is off to his best start in 2009. Also playing well, Chris DiMarco, in the tournament on a sponsor's exemption, sits at 4 under after a 67 in Round 2. Chris has now made 12 of 15 cuts for the year after coming off a few seasons in which he had injuries and surgery. He's playing this season on his Top 25 Money List exemption.

Co-leader Jim Furyk posted a round of 70 and a two-day total of 8 under, making birdie on the 18th to get get into tomorrow's final pairing. Though his streak of six consecutive rounds in the 60s was broken, he did extend his streak of rounds under par to eight.

What does all this mean? We have a bunched leaderboard headed into the weekend, which will make for some very exciting golf for listeners, spectators and viewers and without question the golfers.

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