Thursday
Aug202009

Furyk not along in lead after 12-under-par day

Saturday, September 6, 2008
Writing from Town and Country, Mo.

That Jim Furyk hasn't won a tournament all year can't be discovered by watching him this week at Bellerive Country Club.

A Chicago favorite thanks to wins in the 2003 United States Open at Olympia Fields and the 2005 Western Open at Cog Hill, Furyk won over a massive gallery of fans on Saturday with a magnificent 36-hole performance in the 105th Western Open.

His morning round of 8-under-par 62 shattered the 61-year-old Western Open single-round scoring record, and dazzled those in the know among the gallery of approximately 35,000 in the second Western dubbed a BMW Championship. The 7-under 28 he scored on his final nine – Bellerive's front side – wiped out a mark that stood for 53 years.

And Furyk wasn't done. Whereas many players will cool off after an extremely low round, Furyk kept battling. Starting on the front side in his afternoon round, Furyk opened by holing a 20-foot birdie putt, and went through the nine holes in 3-under 32, the centerpiece to his round of 4-under 66, giving him a total of 12-under 128 for the day and, most important, 12-under 198 heading into Sunday's final round.

"I liked the idea of turning around and going right back after it," Furyk said. "The idea is, 'Hey, you're playing well. I just hit it at every flag and shot 7-under on a side, and now I get to do it again.' You want to keep that momentum going.

"Also, you can get impatient and try to force the ball. I just wanted to go out there and play solid, try and keep up front and make the rest of the field chase me."

That they are doing, and, to this point in the third round, only Camilo Villegas, the leader after 18 and 36 holes, is succeeding. When play was suspended by darkness, Villegas also stood 12 under, with five holes remaining in his second round.

"We knew we weren't going to finish," said Villegas, who started Round 3 at 3:50 p.m. "It's not easy, but you've just got to come with a good attitude and stick with it."

He did, surviving a double bogey in the morning round to post a 4-under 66, and going 3-under through 13 holes in the afternoon and early evening.

Meanwhile, Furyk was insane. Put together his consecutive front nines, and Furyk played 18 holes, in 60 strokes. That's not a golf score, it's a typographical error.

"Obviously, he had an unbelievable day," Villegas said. "But that show you there's some birdies out there."

Plus an eagle, which Furyk made early in his second nine in Round 2. That was the trigger for his binge of red numbers. Everything considered, Furyk may want to take Bellerive's front nine home with him. Through three rounds, he's 11-under on that side, and only 1-under on the back nine.

His 62-66 day, which included a 91-minute fog break after he played the first of the 36 holes, added up to 128, which leads him back to the record book. That matched Tiger Woods' last two rounds on Dubsdread last year, and stands two strokes better than the middle two rounds by both Aaron Baddeley and Steve Stricker last year.

What's more, Furyk's 54-hole total of 12-under-par 198 matches the totals for the first three rounds of a Western, established by Woods in 2003 and equaled by Stricker and Baddeley last year. It's three strokes off the 195 Woods stitched together in the final three rounds last year, but, as 11-handicapper Scarlett O'Hara once said, tomorrow is another day.

With all that, it should be expected that Furyk has a big lead on the field, but Villegas is hanging around him like a bad cold. Thanks to the fog delay, he and 22 other players will have to finish the third round Sunday morning at 7:30 a.m. After that, the field will be re-paired and the final round will commence at 10 a.m. And, ideally, will finish on Sunday as well.

Furyk has slept on many a third round lead, including when he won the Western in 2005. But this is new territory for Villegas, a 26-year-old Columbian looking for his first victory in a PGA Tour tournament in his 85th start.

"I'm just excited," Villegas said. "I'm excited to come back tomorrow, play some good golf and see what happens."

The aforementioned aside, this is not a two-man race. At this juncture, there are nine other players within five strokes of Furyk and Villegas, including Anthony Kim (fourth at 9-under with one hole remaining), D.J. Trahan (at 8-under 202, and whose 7-under 63 in the second round would have tied the Western Open scoring record, except for Furyk finishing in the group ahead of him), 2004 Western Open winner Stephen Ames (at 7-under 203), and one Phil Mickelson (at 7-under with two holes to play).

Additionally, K.J. Choi, whose 6-under 64 for a total of 8-under 202 is the best score of the third round to this point, will tell you not to forget about K.J. Choi. Told the leader is at 13-under, Choi said, "So we hurry up and catch him tomorrow."

The way things have gone at Bellerive, which is French for "birdie heaven," it's certainly possible, and will be one stroke less arduous than Choi believes.

– Tim Cronin
Thursday
Aug202009

Furyk's 62 leads record-setting round

Saturday, September 6, 2008
Writing from Town and Country, Mo.

The first hint there were birdies to be had at Bellerive Country Club in the second round of the 105th Western Open came early, even before fog caused a 91-minute delay. Angel Cabrera birdied his first two holes.

Another hint came three minutes past 10 a.m., when Sergio Garcia made an ace on the 203-yard third hole.

Then came the onslaught, not including the third round ace by Bart Bryant. By the end of the round at midafternoon Saturday, the Western's two oldest scoring records had fallen. Jim Furyk scored 8-under-par 62, including a 7-under 28 on his inward nine, breaking a pair of marks that had stood for over 50 years.

The culmination of Furyk's record round was a curling 13-foot birdie putt on the ninth hole, the last of his second round. When that, his fifth straight birdie to end the round, dropped, he not only gained a share of the lead with Camilo Villegas for the moment, but knocked Cary Middlecoff and George Payton out of the record perches they had occupied for more than a generation.

Villegas, playing in a group finishing 90 minutes after Furyk, birdied his last hole for a second-round 66 and a total of 9-under 131, a stroke ahead of Furyk on paper and in reality. That was a big recovery from the double-bogey 6 he made on the ninth hole, when he four-putted from 60 feet.

"It wasn't pretty there," Villegas said. "Four-putts always make you feel a little shaky. They rattle your day, rattle your head. Fortunately, it rattled mine in a good way."

By the time Villegas, who birdied the next two holes, had finished, Furyk, who had birdied the first hole of his third round to advance to 9 under, was once again at 8 under.

"Through 10 (holes), I probably didn't see a 62 coming, and then you hole out a wedge and a whole bunch of putts go in," Furyk said between rounds. "I just kept knocking it down the middle of the fairway and hitting it to about 10 feet, and giving myself a chance."

The birdies in his closing streak came from about five feet on the par-4 fifth hole, seven feet on the par-3 sixth, 16 feet on the par-4 seventh, eight feet on the par-5 eighth, and 13 feet on the par-4 ninth, after an approach from 165 yards on the uphill test.

Furyk, who won the Western in 2005, two years after he captured the United States Open at Olympia Fields, had opened with an even-par 70, and wasn't pleased with his putting.

"I didn't get the ball in the hole real well shooting even par, but it turned around quickly," Furyk said. "It seemed like they came in bunches. You just had to stay patient."

His round was both consistent and spectacular. Furyk hit 13 of 14 fairways – his missed the 12th, his third hole of the morning round, where his only bogey came about – and made seven birdies in all, along with the eagle.

Middlecoff, the golfing dentist from Memphis, was the first player to shoot 29 for nine holes in a Western, doing so on the front side of the final round at Portland Golf Club in 1955. Now he and the quartet who had matched him are relegated to second place.

Payton was the first player to score 63 in the Western, accomplishing the feat in the second round of the 1947 Western at Salt Lake Country Club, 61 years ago. Two days later, Ben Hogan matched him in the second round, and another 12 rounds of 63, the last two by Tiger Woods, had been posted since.

Furyk's sterling 62, which included an eagle 2 from 113 yards out on the second hole, now leads the pack.

Amazingly, three players in the next three groups finishing on the ninth had opportunities to do go low as well. Furyk holed out at 1:19 p.m., doing so to a good round of applause, but without the majority of the gallery around the ninth realizing history had been made. The big electronic scoreboard installed by the PGA Tour was turned off, because it was in direct line of most of the players when they were putting.

Then came Furyk's challengers. D.J. Trahan, in the following group, settled for par on the ninth hole, and a 63, at 1:32 p.m. Aaron Baddeley was next, and parred the last for a 64, at 1:46 p.m. Finally came Boo Weekley, who was 7 under on his first 12 holes. He faltered with two bogeys in the final four holes and settled for a ho-hum 65, which was also accomplished by John Mallinger, who was playing with Baddeley. Tommy Armour III also had a 64.

It must have been a tough day to be Jonathan Byrd. He played with Baddeley and Mallinger, scored 68, and had to feel he had been lapped by the field.

The third round began for many players before the second round ended for the final groups, which allowed Furyk to take the outright lead when he dropped a 20-footer on the first hole. Villegas, a stroke behind, then birdied the 18th after Furyk bogeyed the fourth hole in the third round to jump ahead again.

The third 65 of Round 2 belonged to Phil Mickelson, who, clad in a bright yellow shirt, was about the only thing to be seen in when the fog was at its thickest. That allowed the lefthander to climb to 8-under 132 for the first 36 holes.

Then there was Garcia's ace, created via a 5-iron from 203 yards on the par 3 third. Neither he nor Bryant, who used a 5-iron on the 171-yard 13th hole early in his second round, will receive a BMW from the sponsor of the now-titled BMW Championship. (Had the aces come on the 16th hole, BMW would have funded an additional Evans Scholarship for each ace.)

Chad Campbell withdrew before the round began for the best of reasons. Wife Amy, due with their first child, began contractions at their home in Dallas. Campbell's absence leaves the field at 68 players. He had scored 3-over 73 in the first round.

– Tim Cronin
Thursday
Aug202009

Here comes Boo!

Saturday, September 6, 2008
Writing from Town and Country, Mo.

Boo Weekley, the antithesis of a country club member, is charging up the leader board at Bellerive Country Club. Weekley is 7 under par on the day through his first 12 holes, including four birdies en route to an opening nine of 4-under 31 on Bellerive's back side, and birdies on his first three holes on the front side.

The course record at Bellerive is 5-under-par 65, set by Jeff Maggert in the 1992 PGA Championship, and matched in Friday's first round by Camilo Villegas. The Western Open, and thus BMW Championship, record is 63, set by George Payton at Salt Lake Country Club in 1947, and matched 13 times since, most recently by Tiger Woods in last year's final round on Cog Hill's Dubsdread course.

After parring the par-4 fourth hole, Weekley stood tied for second with Andres Romero at 6 under for the championship, a stroke behind Villegas, who regained the lead at 7 under with a birdie on the eighth hole. That's how things stood at 12:39 p.m.

Incidentally, add Weekley and Briny Baird to those who scored 4-under 31 on the back side. The best score to this point on the front side is 3-under 32, by Angel Cabrera and Bart Bryant.

There was one withdrawal before the round: Chad Campbell left the building, leaving 68 players in the field.

– Tim Cronin
Thursday
Aug202009

Garcia is aces at Bellerive

Saturday, September 6, 2008
Writing from Town and Country, Mo.

The sun has come out at Bellerive Country Club, and so have the stars. Since play in the 105th Western Open, a.k.a the BMW Championship, resumed at 9 a.m., Sergio Garcia's aced the 203-yard third hole – club as yet unavailable – and Briny Baird and Jim Furyk have eagled par 4s from the fairway.

At 11:48 a.m., Andres Romero of Argentina was the leader by two strokes, at 7 under par, and 3-under for the day through six holes. A five-way tie for second included Garcia, overnight leader Camilo Villegas, and 1996 Western Open winner Steve Stricker.

The hottest players on the course over nine holes were Tommy Armour III and D.J. Trahan. Each played the back nine, their first nine, in 4-under 31.

The best news of all: The sun is out.

Further updates as warranted and after the end of the second round; a full report after the conclusion of play today.

– Tim Cronin
Thursday
Aug202009

A foggy day in Bellerive town

Saturday, September 6, 2008
Writing from Town and Country, Mo.

Just when it looked as the 105th Western Open was running like clockwork, fog rolled into the grounds of Bellerive Country Club and brought play to a screeching halt.

The action started at 7 a.m. Saturday, and stopped at 7:29 a.m., just as the fourth groups of the day were about to tee off on the first and 10th holes in the second round. It's the first of two to be played on the day the retitled BMW Championship's schedule, pushed back a day by the deluge from the remnants of Hurricane Gustav, finally catches up to the original plan.

Play resumed at 9 a.m., but the 91-minute delay means it's unlikely every group will be able to play 36 holes. Sunset is 7:23 p.m., and it would be difficult to continue play much past 7:30 p.m.

The cloud ceiling fell in quickly. At 7 a.m., the 10th fairway was clearly visible from the tee. By 7:10 a.m., when Ben Curtis' group started, it was difficult to see his tee shot land. By 7:20 a.m., Jim Furyk couldn't see his tee ball past 150 yards. By 7:30 a.m., Ben Crane teed off, and then the word came that play would be suspended. Playing partners Kevin Streelman and D.J. Trahan teed off on the off-chance they would be able to see the green from the fairway, got to their balls, and found that the fog was settling in so thickly, the green disappeared.

Once play resumed, Crane bogeyed the par-4 hole, but Streelman and Trahan birdied both the 10th and the 11th. Camilo Villegas the leader at 5-under 65 through the first round, won't tee off until 10:20 a.m. His Round 3 tee time of 2:20 p.m. will be pushed back an undetermined amount of time, probably past 3:30 p.m.

Updates when events warrant and after the conclusion of the second round; a complete report after the day's play.

– Tim Cronin