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Wrap-up: the Memorial Tournament, Rd. 2

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Daily Wrap Up

DUBLIN, OH - MAY 30:  Paul Casey of England watches his second shot on the 15th hole during the second round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide Insurance at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 30, 2014 in Dublin, Ohio.  (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

DUBLIN, OH - MAY 30: Paul Casey of England watches his second shot on the 15th hole during the second round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide Insurance at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 30, 2014 in Dublin, Ohio. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)



    Watson gave him a good run in an active round that featured six birdies, five bogeys and an eagle. He only was angry at a few shots where he failed to concentrate. Even so, a bogey-bogey finish wasn't enough to entirely ruin his day. Watson has never finished better than 23rd in eight previous appearances.

    "I can't look at the bogeys," Watson said. "I've got to look at where I'm at. If you told me it's my best two days around this golf course, I'd take it."

    Chris Kirk (70) was four shots behind. Hideki Matsuyama (67) and Martin Flores (68) were five back.

    Adam Scott, who won Colonial in his debut at No. 1 in the world, shot 70 and was at 5-under 139, still in the mix depending on how Casey fares on the weekend. Phil Mickelson was happy to get in two more rounds. He shot a 70, though he was 10 shots back.

    Casey, once a Ryder Cup regular who reached as high as No. 3 in the world, is slowly getting his game and his life back in the right place. He endured injuries to his shoulder and his toe that kept him winless for more than two years. He went through a divorce. He wondered if he would ever return to the brand of golf he was capable of playing.

    Weeks like this offer promise.

    Casey won the Irish Open a year ago with what he called "spectacular" golf. The game is still there.

    "It's slowly crawling along and making progress, climbing back up the ladder, however you want to phrase it," Casey said. "It's very difficult when you've played to a certain level and then ... I genuinely had no clue how to play to that level.

    "Luckily, I didn't think about that too long."

    His life is back in order. Casey is married to British television presenter Pollyanna Woodward. They are expecting their first child (a boy) in September. He talks about having perspective, knowing where golf fits on his list of what's important.

    His golf has looked familiar over the last two days.

    McIlroy could say the same. Except for last week at the BMW PGA Championship in England, which he won with birdies on the last two holes, McIlroy's good golf has been stalled by bad patches, and Friday was no exception.

    In fact, it nearly has become the rule.

    He shot a 43 on the back nine -- he started the round at No. 10 -- making this the fourth consecutive PGA TOUR event where he shot at least 40 over nine holes. All of them have been in the second round.

    McIlroy twice hit the trees on the 13th hole and made double bogey. He hit into the water on the 14th for double bogey. And then he double-hit a wedge on the 15th to make it three straight double bogeys.

    "These little runs I'm getting on where it gets away from me, I was able to avoid that last week," McIlroy said. "Not so much this week. Even though I had such a bad day, I'm still in with a chance depending on what the guys do this afternoon. So going into the weekend, not exactly where I want to be. But it could be worse."

    Casey simple made it a lot harder.

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