For nearly four hours, Troy Matteson tried to think of ways to kill time in the clubhouse as thunderstorms rolled across Annandale Golf Club.
He watched a little television. Swapped stories with other golfers. Counted the minutes as they slowly ticked off the clock.
Turns out it was worth the wait.
Matteson birdied his final three holes of the day after the lengthy delay, taking advantage of Annandale’s forgiving fairways and greens to share the Viking Classic lead with George McNeill.
Matteson finished his round, but McNeill was on No. 18 when the final delay was called at about 6:30pm local time because of lightning in the area. The day featured nearly six hours of delays as soaking thunderstorms rolled through central Mississippi on a steamy summer afternoon.
USPGA Tour officials said Annandale has received more than 10cm of rain since Monday.
That did not stop Matteson. The 31-year-old with two Tour victories was 12-under-par after firing his second straight six-under 66.
“It’s kind of weird — I usually don’t play that well coming off a rain delay like that,” Matteson said. “Somehow the greens are standing up to the rain. They’re soft, but they’re very smooth. These are some of the best Bermuda greens we play all season and they’ve stayed very consistent with their speed.”
McNeill, a 35-year-old who has one USPGA Tour win, was seven-under through 17 holes and was to resume play yesterday on the 18th fairway.
The start was delayed two hours after a heavy round of overnight thunderstorms dumped more than 2.5cm of rain at Annandale. Play began just after 9am, but another heavy round of storms hit the course at about 2pm, sending spectators scrambling and leaving puddles on the fairways.
Play started again 5:40pm, but about an hour later more lightning sent the players to the clubhouse for good. The second round was to resume at 7am yesterday. Tour officials still hope to finish the tournament today.
The Viking Classic was canceled in 2009 for the only time in its 45-year history after more than 50cm of rain rendered the course unplayable.
Scores were low for the second straight day. Players were allowed to lift, clean and place balls in the fairway and the soft greens made for prime scoring conditions. The projected cut is at three-under and 107 players had a score of par of better.
Matteson expects low scores to continue throughout the weekend.
“It’s perfect conditions for us,” he said. “This is what guys putt best on. This is kind of a putting contest with everything being so soft right now.”
Blake Adams had the day’s best round with a 62, making nine birdies, one eagle and one bogey to spring from seven strokes back to just two behind McNeill and Matteson.
Kevin Kisner and 51-year-old Tom Pernice Jr were tied one shot off the lead.
Tim Petrovic, Bobby Gates, Brendon de Jonge, Peter Lonard, Sunghoon Kang and John Mallinger started the second round in a tie for the lead after shooting an opening 65. Only Gates played his full second round on Friday, shooting three-under to fall two shots back.
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