The Daily Wrap-up, Second round: St. Jude Classic

text size
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size

Email This Story Print This Story RSS
Jun. 11, 2010
By Staff and Wire Reports

MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Lee Westwood had heard how challenging the TPC Southwind course is when the wind blows. Now the Englishman knows for himself how true all that talk really is.

1sjclogo.jpg
Second-round coverage
SEEING CLEARLY: A year ago, Robert Karlsson's career was in jeopardy. Now he can see clearly, says Brian Wacker. Story
MCILROY MOVES UP: Thanks to a second-round 66, Rory McIlroy moved into contention and is five back going to the weekend. Story

Westwood scrambled to birdie his final three holes in grabbing a share of a one-stroke lead Friday with Garrett Willis after the second round of the St. Jude Classic presented by Smith & Nephew with the winds gusting up to 22 mph. Westwood, making his Memphis debut this week as part of his tuneup for next week's U.S. Open, said that made it tricky judging shots after seeing no wind Thursday.

"You've got to be on the fairway to attack the flags, and I just didn't hit it close enough to the flag early on," he said. "So it was a day of patience and battling, and I was rewarded at the end of the round with three birdies for doing that."

Westwood had a one-stroke lead after his opening 65, and the world's No. 3-ranked player dropped two strokes off the pace with two bogeys. He rolled in a 26-footer for birdie on No. 17, and then hit a 9-iron within 4 feet for a 68 that tied him with Willis at 9-under 131 total through 36 holes.

Willis, who spent last year on the Nationwide Tour, had five birdies in a bogey-free round to put himself in the final group for Saturday.

Charley Hoffman had the clubhouse lead early with a 65 and was at 132. Robert Karlsson (66) and Robert Garrigus (66) were tied for third at 133. Texas teenager Jordan Spieth, who became the sixth-youngest to make a PGA TOUR cut at the HP Byron Nelson Championship last month, missed this cut at 1 over as he finished 2-over 142.

Hoffman took advantage of his morning tee time with little wind in becoming the first to reach 8 under. His sixth birdie, which he rolled in from 78 feet on the par-3 14th, helped him take the clubhouse lead.

"I think they gypped me a few feet," Hoffman said on the measurement of a putt he put at 90 feet and the longest putt of his life.

Westwood joined him at 8 under with his first birdie of the round on his fourth hole. He gave that stroke back with a bogey on No. 8 when he was short of the par-3 green and didn't get up and down. Westwood pushed a 17-footer for birdie on No. 9 just right of the hole.

He dropped another shot on the par-3 14th when he hit his tee shot into a bunker behind the green and two-putted.

"I set myself a little task of trying to birdie two of the last four holes to shoot under 70," Westwood said. "I birdied the last three holes and had a good chance at 15. I'm pleased with that. It was a great way to finish off the day and send it into tomorrow with momentum."

Willis won the 2001 Tucson Open before finding himself back on the Nationwide Tour last year where he finished 12th on the money list to get back to the PGA TOUR.

He has made 10 of 13 cuts this year and tied for 13th at the Valero Texas Open for his best finish. He had the first-round lead at the Transitions Championship after opening with a 65 but finished tied for 72nd. Willis, who lives in Knoxville, Tenn., said that taught him a very important lesson about patience.

"I just kind of realize that this is the opportunity for me to support my family," Willis said. "I don't need to go out there and shoot at every pin. I can go out there, shoot for the middle of the green, try to make a putt from 20, 30 feet. If I don't, tap it in for par, and I'm just trying to play as well as I possibly can."

That focus helped on a day where he hit an approach into a fan's chair on the par-5 third and had to wait for a ruling for a drop where the ball rolled behind a tree. That forced him to punch out left of the green where he got a lucky kick with it rolling up to 30 feet closer to set him up for birdie.

"That got some excitement definitely going for me," Willis said.

He rolled in a 3-footer for birdie on No. 9 and had his own strong finish with birdies on three of the final four holes. His 18-foot putt lipped in for birdie on No. 15 when he thought he had missed it, two-putted for birdie from 60 feet on the par-5 16th and watched Tom Pernice's putt on the same line on No. 18 before rolling in a 19-footer.

"I'm trying to be a lot smarter and try to learn from my mistakes, knowing that a lot of pars on this golf course when the wind starts blowing is a pretty good score," Willis said.

Tim Petrovic briefly tied Hoffman at 8 under with his fourth birdie on his 12th hole only to bogey two of his next three to fall off the pace. He finished with a 68 and was tied for sixth at 134 with Lee Janzen (66) and Shaun Micheel (66).

This is Karlsson's first trip to Memphis as his tuneup for the U.S. Open. He got a bounce off a cart that helped him save par on his final hole.

"I didn't aim for that one actually," he said to laughter. "I hit it a bit right, and I was very happy when I saw it, when I saw where it was. That happens. It was good there was no one in the cart anyway.

DIVOTS: Paul Goydos withdrew with an injury. He opened with a 75 and shot a 38 through his first nine holes Friday, putting him 8 over. Mark Hensby withdrew due to illness, and John Morse withdrew with an injury. ... Steve Wheatcroft had a double eagle on the par-5 No. 3. He holed out from 243 yards with a hybrid 2-iron for just the fourth double-eagle in this event's history. It didn't help enough. He missed the cut. ... John Daly was among the 81 making the cut. He made it right at 1 over due to taking a two-shot penalty for hitting the wrong ball out of a hazard on No. 9 and finishing with a double bogey on the hole.

Notables at the St. Jude Classic
Name Score Position Comment Saturday tee time (ET)
Lee Janzen 6 under T6 The two-time U.S. Open champ bogeyed his final hole of the day, No. 9, but that was the only blemish in a very good round of 66. 12:20 p.m.
Boo Weekley 5 under T10 Weekley hit 14 greens on his way to six birdies and just two bogeys for his best score (66) since the second round at Colonial. 12:01 p.m.
Rory McIlroy 5 under T10 McIlroy took advantage of an early tee time when the course was soft and wind was down to shoot a bogey-free 66. 12:01 p.m.
Camilo Villegas 2 under T27 Villegas went from outside the cut line to well inside it with a 67 that ended with four birdies on his last five holes. 11:14 a.m.
Padraig Harrington 1 under T32 Harrington, who is coming off knee surgery, had a nine-shot swing for the worse with a 74 that featured two double bogeys. 10:26 a.m.
Friday's Best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 16th hole was the easiest with a Friday scoring average of 4.633.
EAGLES: 4 BIRDIES: 67 PARS: 64
BOGEYS: 11 OTHERS: 4
The par-3 14th hole was the toughest with a Thursday scoring average of 3.267.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 16 PARS: 90
BOGEYS: 32 OTHERS: 12
Email This Story   Print This Story   RSS   Bookmark and Share
SHOP.PGATOUR.COM

Shop your favorite brand name golf equipment and accessories at SHOP.PGATOUR.COM

FANTASY
Click Here
© 1995-2012 PGA TOUR, Inc. | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. PGA TOUR, Champions Tour, Nationwide Tour and the swinging golfer logo are registered trademarks.
Turner PGATOUR.com is part of Turner - SI Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network