The Oklahoman

Tiger trails by 2 at Innisbrook

- BY DOUG FERGUSON

PALM HARBOR, FLA. — Corey Conners knew Tiger Woods had finished his second round at Innisbrook because he couldn’t see him. He was only about 50 yards from the ninth green, but there were too many fans covering every inch of grass, packed in a dozen deep because of Woods.

Woods brought the Valspar Championsh­ip to life Friday with his best round of a comeback that is building momentum toward the Masters.

Conners was happy to play a quiet round in the afternoon and wind up with the lead.

The Canadian rookie ran off three birdies before a careless error set him back, and he finished with a 2-under 69 for a two-shot lead going into the weekend. Right on his heels was Woods, who kept a clean card until his final hole and shot 68.

Conners was on the putting green when Woods and his entourage — officials, security, media and stragglers — walked along the edge of the green, in front of another group waiting to tee off on No. 1 and toward the scoring area.

“I definitely saw that,” Conners said. “I’ve seen that the last few days as well. Pretty cool. Hopefully, I can be in a position where I get some followers Sunday.”

Until that moment, the closest Conners ever got to Woods was at the Masters three years ago when he watched him on the range. Conners played at Augusta National that year as the U.S. Amateur runner-up.

Being close to him on the leaderboar­d is an entirely different dynamic.

Conners was at 6-under 136 and will play in the final group with Paul Casey, who had a 68. Woods and Brandt Snedeker (68) will be in the group in front of them, with thousands of fans lining the fairways and surroundin­g the greens.

“I don’t think this will be leading, but at least I’m there with a chance going into the weekend,” Woods said when he finished. “Today was a good day.”

Woods has been slowed by mistakes, some leading to big numbers. The second round at Innisbrook was all about control of his shots that rarely put him out of position off the tee and especially on the green, where he could attack putts from below the hole.

He took the lead with a drive that was heading left, struck a cart path and caromed back into the fairway on his 14th hole, the par-5 fifth. That set up a long iron into the front right bunker and a delicate shot from the sand to about 5 feet for his fourth birdie of the round.

He saved par with a 12-foot putt on No. 7 and was heading toward a bogey-free round until his wedge on the par-5 ninth rode the shifting wind to the right and into the gallery, his ball on a woman’s bag. After getting a drop, his chip came out too strong and hit the flag, leaving it only 6 feet away.

He missed the putt and didn’t seem all that bothered.

Just over five months ago, Woods still didn’t have clearance to begin hitting full shots, much less to play without restrictio­ns. In his fourth PGA Tour event in seven weeks, he looks like a contender.

“I’ve come a long way in that span of time,” Woods said.

The energy in the gallery was enormous, especially for this sleepy tournament, and toward the end of the round the fans were looking for any reason to cheer.

EUROPEAN TOUR:

Emiliano Grillo took a fourstroke lead at the Indian Open after shooting 4-under 68 on Friday. The Argentine had five birdies and a bogey, lowering his total to 11-under 133 for the tournament. Shubhankar Sharma, who three days ago received a special invitation to play at the Masters, made a charge with an 8-under 64 — the best round of the day. He had nine birdies, including six on the last nine holes. His only bogey came on the par-4 seventh. Sharma was 5 over after his first nine holes on Thursday.

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