Texarkana Gazette

Malnati leads Wells Fargo; Tiger survives

- By Doug Ferguson

CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Peter Malnati and Tiger Woods both had reason to celebrate on the ninth green at Quail Hollow at the end of their rounds.

Malnati was coming off two straight birdies to take the lead Friday in the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip when he put his 5-iron in a deep bunker to the right, with the green running away from him. He was trying to blast out to 15 feet, but he got the club too much under the ball and feared for the worst until it cleared the lip by inches.

Malnati emphatical­ly wiped his hand across his brow, made the 6-foot par putt for a 3-under 68 and had a one-shot lead over Jason Day and Aaron Wise.

“Pretty scary when I hit it,” he said. “I got away with it, looked like a genius.”

Hours earlier, Woods stood over an 18-foot putt on No. 9, his final hole of another ordinary round that up until then featured no birdies. He finally made one, and stretched out both hands in mock celebratio­n when it dropped.

“I’m on a hot streak right now. I made the last putt,” he said.

Never mind that it was the only putt he made longer than 5 feet. Or that he was nine shots out of the lead in a tie for 48th, his worst position through 36 holes in his last five tournament­s. At least he was still playing on the weekend at Quail Hollow, where he had missed the cut his previous two trips. That putt made certain of it, though Woods made it the cut with one shot to spare.

Rory McIlroy and Phil Mickelson also had to sweat it out.

McIlroy, the only two-time winner at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip, celebrated his 29th birthday on Friday by matching his worst score at Quail Hollow with a 76, including three bogeys over the last five holes.

He was in the same spot as Woods, nine shots out of the lead.

“Struggled with my game, struggled to get my ball in the fairway, made some pretty bad mistakes, didn’t birdie any of the par 5s,” McIlroy said. “It just was one of those days where I just couldn’t get anything going.”

Mickelson wasn’t that wild—three bogeys, two birdies, another 72, and he made the cut with one shot to spare.

Malnati rarely is without a smile, even though this is the last year of his exemption from winning an opposite-field event in Mississipp­i in the fall of 2015. He had reason to celebrate the par, if for no other reason than it was the first time he has led after any round except the final round when he won the Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip.

He is not long or regarded as a pure striker of the golf ball, which is not a great combinatio­n at this level. Making it worse was that Malnati was caught up in results, which have not been good, and he wanted to get back to trying only to be at his very best over every shot.

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