Edmonton Journal

Watson-rose duel produces excellent golf shots

-

Bubba Watson and Justin Rose put on an amazing show of birdies in blustery conditions at Doral, making 17 between them while playing in the same group Friday at the Cadillac Championsh­ip.

Their playful duel was decided by Watson’s eagle, giving him a 10-under 62 and a one-shot lead.

Watson belted a three-iron that barely got over a palm tree, carried over the water into the wind and settled six feet away on the par-5 eighth for an eagle putt that gave him a one-shot lead over Rose.

Mark Wilson, the third in that group, shot a respectabl­e 70 and was just along for the ride.

“They did everything right,” Wilson said. “It was some of the best golf I’ve seen collective­ly between them.”

Watson was at 12-under 132 and will get to play again in the final group Saturday with Rose, who had to settle for a 64.

“Maybe they’ve been cutting the hole a little bigger,” Rose said.

Despite the steady wind, there were plenty of low scores on the Blue Monster. The average score was 69.9, close to three strokes easier than the opening round. There were 12 scores in the 60s on Thursday, and 31 of them Friday.

Tiger Woods played bogey-free for a 67 and actually lost ground. He moved up the leaderboar­d, but is seven shots behind going into the weekend, with 14 players ahead of him.

“This is the highest score I could have shot today, for sure,” Woods said.

Rory Mcilroy, in his first tournament as the new world No. 1, managed a 69 and fell 10 shots off the lead.

Perhaps most peculiar about Watson being atop the leaderboar­d at Doral is that he really doesn’t like the course. Without many trees except for the waving palms, he can’t figure out where he’s supposed to be hitting the ball. But he kept hitting it long, had short irons into the greens and made his share of putts. That works just about anywhere.

As always, there were a few shots that only Watson can see.

He was so far left of the sixth fairway, that a tree was blocking his path to the green. Watson had only 135 yards to the hole, but instead of playing a sand wedge, he hit nine-iron and aimed it some 20 yards right of the green, slicing it back into the left-to-right wind beyond the hole until the wind pushed it back on the descent. It landed six feet from the cup.

His caddy, Ted Scott, keeps notes in the yardage book of how Watson plays each hole in every round. Next to the nine-iron from 135 yards, he put in parenthese­s, “Wow.”

There was another “wow” inscriptio­n two holes later. Watson was in the fairway on the par-5 eighth, but the best path to the green was around a palm tree near the ropes where the photograph­ers were camped out.

“I took it right up the edge of that tree. There’s a little tree there and it actually nicked that limb a little bit,” Watson said. “I hit it as hard as I could, just a low, what everybody calls a stinger. Hit as hard as I could low and knew it wasn’t going to slice. So all I was protecting was the draw and it went dead straight and came off perfect. And the rest is history.”

 ?? Patrick
Farel, Miami Herald ?? Bubba Watson hits from the fifth tee during the second round of the Cadillac
Championsh­ip at the Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Doral, Fla., on Friday.
Patrick Farel, Miami Herald Bubba Watson hits from the fifth tee during the second round of the Cadillac Championsh­ip at the Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Doral, Fla., on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada