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PGA gets its wish: Woods makes cut in Farmers

- By Tod Leonard San Diego Union-Tribune

SAN DIEGO — Tiger Woods stalked his 90-foot eagle putt as if a victory depended on how well he could cozy it up to the hole.

In a sense, the stakes were nearly as high.

Woods was grinding on Friday to make the weekend cut in the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. After he reached the par-5 ninth green on the North Course in two shots on his 18th hole of the day, all indication­s were that he’d need to manage two putts for birdie to hang around for the weekend.

Since Woods hadn’t seen a scoreboard over the last nine holes, he didn’t know exactly where he stood, but he could probably sense it from the tense murmurs in the crowd. He had bogeyed the par-3 eighth to fall outside the cut bubble.

After a very long look on No. 9 green, Woods aligned himself to the ball, took his stroke, and a putt that looked too quick at the start ended up trickling to about 8 inches short of the cup.

Tap-in birdie. Paycheck in Woods’ future. Entire golf world breathing a sigh of relief.

Overcoming a wild day with the driver, Woods scored a 1-under-par 71 to give him a 1-under total for 36 holes. That fell exactly on the cut line.

Seventy-seven players were to begin the third round, with Ryan Palmer holding the lead after scoring 5-under 67 on the North Course to get to 11 under overall.

Defending Farmers Open champion Jon Rahm (66, North Course) was alone in second at 10 under, while Luke List (66, South Course) and Tony Finau (70, South) were 9 under.

Twelve months removed from playing in his last official PGA Tour event, here at Torrey Pines, Woods has a chance to truly feel a competitiv­e buzz for the first time in 889 days — since he tied for 10th in the Wyndham Championsh­ip in August 2015.

“It was a grind. I fought hard,” Woods said. “Typical, you know, just me going out there and fighting for whatever I can get.

“Everyone’s so stacked up, anybody can win the tournament who makes the cut. Hopefully, tomorrow I can go out there and post a low number.”

Getting to the weekend was a huge step for Woods, and it was big for golf. Judging by the thousands of fans following Woods and the raucous enthusiasm they showed, Woods’ presence continues to take interest to another level.

“Unless you’re in a major championsh­ip, you don’t get big crowds,” said Charley Hoffman, who played in Woods’ group the first two days and stands at 3 under. “He brings people out there.

“There’s no question I’m rooting for Tiger Woods,” he added. “Obviously, on Sunday I want to beat him, but there’s not a person in this field that isn’t rooting for Tiger Woods to be back in the game and be competitiv­e.”

When Woods said he fought to make the cut, he was talking about a full-on brawl with the North Course. The North’s fairways are narrowed to U.S. Open-width for the Farmers and rank among the hardest to hit on the PGA Tour.

It’s not a forgiving course for an uncooperat­ive driver, and Woods’ club acted like a fitful 5-year-old. He found only 3 of 14 of the fairways and many of the drives were 30 to 40 yards off line.

Quipped a scribe following Woods: “I was inside the ropes more than Tiger.” we could get it right back into play,” said Sue Witters, the LPGA’s vice president of Tour rules and competitio­n. “This morning was a different story. The winds are up from what they were and we got to the point on 13 where we could not get a ball to stay at rest on the green.”

On Thursday, Henderson shot a bogey-free 5-under 68 in high wind to take a onestroke lead. The bogey on the par-4 first dropped the 20-year-old Canadian into a tie with Australia’s Sarah Jane Smith and Spanish rookie Luna Sobron Galmes. Smith and Sobron Galmes will begin their rounds today when morning wind of 25-32 mph with gusts to 38 was expected.

“Tomorrow, hopefully, will be more like yesterday,” Witters said. “The winds will come down a bit, and then Sunday is even better than that. Sunday should be out of the four days the least windy, but it will still be windy.”

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