Rory Sabbatini continued to make a difficult golf course look like a breeze on Friday, running off three straight birdies toward the end of his round for another three-under 67 and a two shot lead over Zach Johnson in the Bridgestone Invitational.
What appeared to be a tuneup for the final major of the season next week at the US PGA Championship is starting to look like it might be an even tougher test. Sabbatini was at six-under 134, with only seven other players able to break par.
Five-time champion Tiger Woods was one of them after an even par 70 in which he had no complaints until reaching the green. He made only two birdies despite hitting 15 greens in regulation, and those were wiped out by a pair of three-putts from about 11m in which he left the first putt about 3m short of the hole.
PHOTO: AP
"They looked fast, but for some reason they putted a little bit slower than I thought they did [Thursday]," Woods said. "I just had a hard time making the adjustment."
He was at 138 along with Scott Verplank (68) and Kenny Perry, who had his second straight 69.
Johnson and Davis Love III had the best rounds of the tournament at 65. Love wound up in the group at 139 that included Lee Westwood and Chris DiMarco.
Johnson attributed his score to hitting fairways and making a bunch of putts, his recipe for winning the US Masters.
"Some of the guys were joking around at lunch that this is one of those courses where if the US Open needed an emergency course, I think you could probably come here within a week's time," he said.
Paul Casey and Hunter Mahan, who shared the first round lead with Sabbatini, both sputtered. Mahan didn't make a birdie until the final hole in his round of 73, while Casey got hung up in the rough on the 18th on his way to a double bogey to also shoot 73. They were at 140.
Sabbatini was headed in that direction, especially after finding the rough left of the 14th fairway and taking bogey. But he holed a 7m birdie putt on the par three 15th, wisely laid up on the 16th and made a 5m birdie putt, then hit an eight iron up the hill on the 17th to about 4m right of the pin for this third straight birdie.
"It's a matter of picking and choosing your targets out there," he said. "There are opportunities you have that you can be aggressive, but you have to kind of back down and just give the course respect. Otherwise, it'll hit you pretty quick."
FLESCH OUT IN FRONT IN RENO
AFP, RENO, Nevada
Steve Flesch fired a three under 69 on Friday to stretch his lead to two strokes at the halfway stage of the Reno-Tahoe Open.
Flesch, who missed the course record by one shot with his 63 on Thursday, had a 36-hole total of 12 under 132, two strokes in front of Charles Warren.
Warren surged into second place with a nine under 63 that included seven birdies and an eagle for 134. Argentina's Jose Coceras was two more shots back after a 72.
Flesch, 40, had six birdies on the day along with a bogey and a double-bogey. He started on the back nine and birdied three of four holes from the 15th.
He slipped up with a double-bogey at the par three second hole, where he was bunkered off the tee and failed to get out with his second shot.
That saw him fall into a tie for the lead with Warren. But Flesh battled back with a birdie at No. 4, then picked up another birdie at the eighth where he nearly holed his approach.
"I just like playing here," Flesch said. "For some reason I've had success on this golf course. Obviously, I just hung in there today as the wind got blustery. It was a lot different than Thursday's round."
Warren also started on the 10th tee and birdied three straight from the 11th.
He picked up shots at 18 and three, then eagled the fourth and birdied five. He picked up one more shot at the eighth.
"Today went well. I was really excited about going out early on some smooth greens," Warren said. "I hit it real close a couple times early in the round and that really got me going."
OCHOA stays ONE STROKE AHEAD
AP, ST. ANDREWS, Scotland
Lorena Ochoa's missed putt at the 18th took the fun away from another big step towards her first major. Michelle Wie's 80 for another missed cut suggested she's still a long way off her first victory as a pro.
While Ochoa shot an even par 73 at St. Andrews on Friday to take a one stroke halfway lead in an historic Women's British Open, Wie was preparing another early flight home. Her seven over 153 meant she missed the cut by two strokes.
"It's a disappointment [missing the cut] because I didn't play as well as I wanted to," said Wie, who has been struggling to shake off a left wrist injury which has reduced her power and length. "I do feel a lot stronger. I'm hitting a lot of shots that I've never really hit before so that's a positive. I just need to take the positives and go on from there. I'm starting to feel really good about it. Obviously today was not my day, but I'll do better."
She went to the 18th with a two shot lead and faced a 8m putt for birdie. Instead of walking off three ahead of the field, the advantage slipped to one as her first putt curled past, and then she missed the return to take a bogey.
She also missed a putt for eagle at 14 but her six under 140 put her one ahead with Wendy Ward (70) and Catriona Matthew (68) tied for second.
Taiwanese world No. 1 women’s doubles star Hsieh Su-wei on Saturday overcame a first-set loss to win her opening match at the Madrid Open. Top seeds Hsieh and partner Elise Mertens of Belgium, with whom she last month won her fourth Indian Wells women’s doubles title, bounced back from a rocky first set to beat Asia Muhammad of the US and Aldila Sutjiadi of Indonesia 2-6, 6-4, 10-2. Hsieh and Mertens were next to face Heather Watson of the UK and Xu Yifan of China in the round of 16. Thirty-eight-year-old Hsieh last month reclaimed her world No. 1 spot after her Indian
EYES ON THE PRIZE: Armed with three solid men’s singles shuttlers and doubles Olympic champions, Taiwan aim to make their first Thomas Cup semi-final, Chou Tien-chen said Taiwanese badminton star Tai Tzu-ying yesterday quickly dispatched Malaysia’s Goh Jin Wei in straight sets, while her male counterpart Chou Tien-chen beat Germany’s Kai Schaefer, as Taiwan’s women’s and men’s teams won their Group B opening rounds of the TotalEnergies BWF Thomas and Uber Cup Finals in Chengdu, China. World No. 5 Tai beat Goh 21-19, 22-20 in a speedy 33 minutes, her fourth straight victory over the world No. 24 shuttler since they first faced each other in the quarter-finals of the 2018 Malaysia Open, where Tai went on to win the women’s singles title. Malaysia followed up Tai’s opening victory
Chen Yi-tung (陳奕通) secured a historic Olympic berth on Sunday by winning the senior men’s foil event at the 2024 Asia Oceania Zonal Olympic Fencing Qualifiers in United Arab Emirates. Chen defeated Samuel Elijah of Singapore 15-4 in the final in Dubai to secure the only wild card in the event, making him the first male Olympian fencer from Taiwan in 36 years and only the sixth Taiwanese fencer to ever qualify for the quadrennial event. The last appearance by a Taiwanese male fencer at the Olympics was in 1988, when Wang San-tsai (王三財) and Cheng Ming-hsiang (鄭明祥) competed in Seoul. The
A soccer jersey carrying a national map including disputed Western Sahara has become a hot commodity in Morocco after a diplomatic dispute with Algeria. Retailers said RS Berkane jerseys have been flying off the shelves after a Confederation of African Football (CAF) Cup match against Algerian club USM Alger was canceled last month over the jerseys. “We are overwhelmed by the influx of messages and requests,” said Brahim Rabii, representative of the official RS Berkane jersey distributor. Algeria broke off diplomatic relations with Morocco in 2021, partly over the issue of Western Sahara. The former Spanish colony is largely controlled by Morocco, but claimed