Lodi News-Sentinel

Woods, Rose take lead into weekend

- By Steve Hummer

ATLANTA — The weekend pulls in too many directions. Prepare to be cleaved and conflicted.

There are some very good reasons why this Tour Championsh­ip is moving to August. And they include: Georgia football (at Mizzou); Georgia Tech football (sticking its hand into the Clemson wood chipper); the Braves (phinishing off the Phils); the Falcons (the Saints are coming, and you’ll know when they get here when you hear the sound of someone playing a washboard).

And now even soccer is demanding a place at the table — while kicking your shins beneath it (Atlanta United at home vs. Real Salt Lake).

So, if the PGA Tour’s big season-ending event is going to command any attention amid all this noise — short of allowing the field to play on donkeys — then it is going to do some voodoo with the leaderboar­d. Does this work for anybody? Tiger Woods co-leads going into the weekend.

A bunch of other guys you may have heard of are right there, too.

If there’s a better show in town than one of the planet’s most recognizab­le athletes trying to adorn an improbable comeback (he left impossible behind a month or so ago) with a victory, by all means flock to it.

It was one thing to get Woods back in the Tour Championsh­ip mix after a five-year absence in any kind of shape outside that of an outpatient. To have him in the lead after each of the first two days is like matching the first three numbers on a lottery ticket, with the next ping pong ball just about to drop.

Friday, Woods was not nearly as efficient with his game as the day before, not so completely in command. His 2 under 68 — following Thursday’s 65 — reflected a day that in general was more difficult. The secondroun­d field scoring average (70.367) was more than a stroke higher than Thursday’s (69.300).

“I didn’t hit it very well overall today,” he said. “Didn’t quite have the sharpness that I had (Thursday), and it was pretty evident.”

World No. 1 Justin Rose was more than happy to join Woodsapalo­oza, shooting 67 Friday and cozying up into a tie with Woods at 7 under for the tournament.

Rose is by far the best situated of those top five in FedEx Cup points who can win outright the $10 million bonus by winning the Tour Championsh­ip. Only two others of the Favored Five, Justin Thomas (4 under) and Tony Finau (2 under), are top 10 on the leaderboar­d entering the weekend.

“I think it’s a simple equation for me right now,” Rose said. “I’m in a position where I want to win this golf tournament and I can keep it as simple as that. I know that if I do that, it’s gravy all the way.”

Rose will be the one who gets to share the final pairing Saturday with Woods, and being a major winner and an Olympic gold medalist, he may be able to handle the position a little better than did Rickie Fowler. Fowler, the first-round coleader, shot a 2-over 72 to fall four off the lead.

Just up in front of the WoodsRose pairing Saturday, there will be no shortage of internatio­nal-level name recognitio­n. Shooting 68 Friday, Rory McIlroy is just two off the lead. Jon Rahm (68 Friday, highlighte­d by a front-nine 30) and Thomas lead a group of four players just three off the lead.

Woods came out Friday with such a bounce in his step that his Fitbit started measuring in air miles. When he birdied the par 3 second hole, he momentaril­y took sole position of the lead. But his days of leaving the rest of the field choking on his wake are behind him.

He took his first bogey since Thursday’s opening hole on the par 3 ninth, when his tee shot landed short in the fringe fronting the green. And he then missed a four-footer for par.

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