Times Colonist

Wet, wild finish for Spieth, Mickelson at Pebble Beach

- DOUG FERGUSON

PEBBLE BEACH, California — Phil Mickelson survived a wild finish without having to deal with the rain. Jordan Spieth endured a wet finish to his day with three tough pars.

Both were atop the leaderboar­d Friday in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, joined by Lucas Glover, Paul Casey and Scott Langley, when the second round was suspended because the rain had formed large puddles on the greens.

They played more golf than expected by moving up the start by an hour, and it was entertaini­ng as ever.

One day after Mickelson didn’t miss a single fairway for the first time in 1,664 rounds on the PGA Tour, he couldn’t seem to find one at Spyglass Hill. He still managed to surge into the lead, including one 3-wood from 256 yards out of the trees on the par-5 14th to six feet.

It caught up with him at the end. After banging in a birdie on the par-3 fifth, Mickelson missed three straight fairways that led to three straight bogeys until he closed with a 4-iron to 18 feet for birdie and a 4-under 68.

“I hate not finishing the round off, making three bogeys after having a pretty good round going in,” Mickelson said. “I’m also lucky to get done now and get the round over with and have ... guys unfortunat­ely are still out there playing in some tough stuff.”

Mickelson was the first to finish at 10-under 133. Glover started strong in tame weather at Pebble Beach and shot a 6-under 66 to get to 10-under 134, while Langley (69 at Spyglass Hill) and Casey (7-under 64 at Monterey Peninsula) narrowly finished at 10-under 133 ahead of the horn that ultimately stopped play for the rest of the day.

Three short blasts signalled the stoppage, but because it wasn’t a dangerous situation, such as lightning, players could complete the hole. Casey was on his final hole at Monterey when he heard the horn, followed by two more.

“I went from upset to happy in an instant,” he said.

Spieth was among 44 players who had to return this morning — weather permitting — to finish the last two holes of his round.

Spieth shot 31 on the back nine at Spyglass Hill to get in the mix, and missed two good birdie chances to start the front nine.

“I got off to a really nice start, which helped, knowing that the conditions were blowing in, trying to take advantage of the front nine,” he said. “And then once they started to come in, it was just try and hold on for dear life.”

He went just long of the green on the par-3 fifth hole, his ball in the sandy dune above the green about three inches from the collar of rough with not much green between him and the hole. Spieth blasted out to four feet and saved par. After coming up short on the uphill sixth into the wind, his 40-yard pitch checked and stopped a foot from the cup.

Johnson, who had hit his second shot into the water, missed from 10 feet for bogey. He missed from inside three feet for par on the previous hole, and missed another 3-footer on No. 3. He was 2-over for his round, seven shots to par behind.

Jason Day was at 9-under with three holes remaining at Spyglass, while Ernie Els had a 68 at Spyglass and was at 6-under.

Nick Taylor was one of five Canadians able to finish the second round. The Abbotsford native had a 1-under 70 and is 4-under for the tournament. Abbotsford’s Adam Hadwin (70) is 2-under, Adam Svensson of Surrey (73) is 2-over while Corey Conners of LIstowel, Ont., (73) and Roger David Hearn of Brantford. Ont., (74) are 4-over.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A rules official calls for greenskeep­ers after the ball of Brice Garnett, right, landed in standing water on the 18th green at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Friday. The round was halted before completion.
ERIC RISBERG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A rules official calls for greenskeep­ers after the ball of Brice Garnett, right, landed in standing water on the 18th green at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Friday. The round was halted before completion.

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