Orlando Sentinel

Palmer paces field that includes Tiger

-

SAN DIEGO — Ryan Palmer is the 36-hole leader in the Farmers Insurance Open. Jon Rahm is right behind, poised to reach No. 1 in the world. And for the first time in 29 months, a PGA Tour event will feature Tiger Woods on the weekend.

Palmer finished eaglebirdi­e on the North Course at Torrey Pines for a 5-under 67. That gave him a one-shot lead over Rahm, the defending champion who birdied two of his last three holes on the North for a 66.

The biggest buzz, as usual, was for Woods. He kept his fairway-lined following in suspense over his closing stretch on the front nine Friday simply by trying to make the cut, and it came down to the last hole.

A wild drive was saved by a perfect flop shot to escape with par on No. 6. Another superb chip on the reachable par-4 seventh set up a birdie, the first time all week he was under par. A chip that bounced hard and rolled off the back of the green led to bogey and left him one shot outside the cut line. From gnarly rough right of the fairway on the par-5 ninth, he hammered a 6-iron to the wrong side of the green, leaving him two putts from 75 feet to make birdie and get to the weekend.

A beautiful lag for a tap-in birdie gave him a 71.

“It was a grind. I fought hard,” Woods said. “Typical. Just me going out there and fighting for whatever I can get. It's all good.”

There's a reason Woods has gone so long — August 2015 at the Wyndham Championsh­ip — without making a cut. This was only his second PGA Tour since then, the greatest reminder of back surgeries that effectivel­y cost two full years of golf. He won the first battle — two more days.

The next one is a bit more ominous. He still was 10 shots behind Palmer, who is going through a minor resurgence of his own. Palmer, who was at 11-under 133, spent the last 18 months on life at home after his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. After her last dose of chemothera­py a year ago, followed by 35 radiation treatments, Jennifer Palmer has had nothing but clean scans. Then, Palmer had surgery on his left shoulder to clean out bone spurs and had not played since August until he headed to Honolulu two weeks ago.

“A lot of distractio­ns behind me,” he said. “So we're definitely playing a little more free and clear.”

The biggest distractio­n on another gorgeous day at Torrey Pines was a pair of bogeys early. He kept his patience, chipped in for eagle at the turn, and then finished with a beautiful approach to 12 feet on the par-5 eighth and a 20-foot birdie putt on the ninth.

And now he has to deal with a big presence in golf — Rahm. The 23-year-old Spaniard won in a playoff last week in the California desert, moving him to No. 2 in the world.

PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — Brooke Henderson bogeyed the first hole to drop into a tie for the lead Friday before the Pure SilkBahama­s LPGA Classic was suspended for the day — and later cut from 72 to 54 holes — because of high wind that moved balls on an exposed green.

Sustained 30-35-mph wind gusting to the low 40s hit the Ocean Club Golf Course, forcing officials to stop second-round play at 8:39 a.m.

They shortened the season-opening event to 54 holes in an attempt to complete play Sunday and didn't rule out a Monday finish.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Welsh golfer Jamie Donaldson followed his opening 62 with a solid 3-under-par 69 to take the clubhouse lead in the weather-interrupte­d second round of the Dubai Desert Classic on Friday.

 ?? GREGORY BULL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the 15th hole of the North Course during Friday’s second round in San Diego.
GREGORY BULL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the 15th hole of the North Course during Friday’s second round in San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States