Montreal Gazette

Woods misses cut by one shot

Meanwhile, Watney’s ‘wake-up call’ propels him to top of the leaderboar­d

- DOUG FERGUSON

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Nick Watney answered what he referred to as a wake-up call at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip by taking the lead.

Tiger Woods might need one after missing the cut.

Watney had gone nine straight rounds on the PGA Tour without breaking 70 and had failed to crack the top 10 in all nine of his stroke-play tournament­s this year. He worked hard to change that, and it paid off Friday with an 8-under 64 that gave him a one-shot lead over Webb Simpson going into the weekend.

A two-time winner last year, Watney had failed to crack the top 30 in a full-field event this year, and missed the cut in New Orleans for his first weekend off at a tournament since July.

“I think last week was a wake-up call for me,” Watney said. “And I’ve worked really hard these five days leading into this event. I think it just shows I’m making progress. Who knows what’s going to happen this weekend, but I’m really excited for it. More hard work, and hopefully I’ll be in this position a lot more.”

Woods wound up in rare position.

He failed to make a birdie on any of the par 5s or any hole on his back nine, missing a 4-foot birdie putt on his 17th hole with the cut on the line. Woods wound up with a 73 – his eighth consecutiv­e round in the 70s – for an even-par 144 to miss the cut by one shot.

It was only the eighth time in 267 events on the PGA Tour that Woods missed the cut, and the first time it happened at the same place twice – Quail Hollow, where in four trips before the downfall in his personal life Woods had won once and never finished worse than 11th.

“This is one of my favourite Tour stops, and unfortunat­ely, I’m just not going to be around for the last two days,” Woods said.

Phil Mickelson and Lee Westwood narrowly avoided joining him.

Mickelson was right on the cut line and facing a scary finish on the par-3 17th over water and the par-4 18th, with a stream running down the left side and trees and trouble on the right. He played both holes perfectly for pars, though his 72 left him 11 shots out of the lead.

Westwood was outside the cut line until he holed an 18-foot birdie on the 17th and made par on No. 18 for a 72.

Seventy-four players made the cut at 1-under 143, the first time in the 10-year history at Quail Hollow the cut was under par.

David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., was the only Canadian to make the cut, shooting even-par 72 Friday to sit at 2-under 142 through 36 holes. That’s good for a share of 49th place.

Mike Weir of Bright’s Grove, Ont., shot 1-over 73 after bogeying three of his final four holes. That left him at even-par 144 and extended his season-long failure to make the cut. Calgarian Stephen Ames also shot 73 Friday to sit at 3-over 147.

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