Wednesday, February 26, 2014

garrett Willis leads rain-delayed Heritage by one after run of six straight birdies

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Garrett Willis was a shot in front of Arjun Atwal, Matt Bettencourt, Chad Campbell and Tim Herron at Harbour Town.
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By 
Pete Iacobelli
Associated Press

Series:
Garrett Willis couldn't give up on "Old Faithful," no matter how many flashy, new belly putters he tested out this week.
Willis entered the Heritage seeking answers to his poor putting and had planned to park his longtime Scotty Cameron model. As he walked to the range Thursday morning, though, Willis just couldn't go through with it and asked his caddie to "go back to my car and get 'Old Faithful.'"
Good thing he did. Willis had a run of six straight birdies on the front nine on the way to a 7-under 64 and a one-shot lead in the suspended first round.
"Obviously, very excited about putting this well, and having a chance to making the cut for a change," Willis said.
He held a one-stroke edge over Arjun Atwal, Matt Bettencourt, Chad Campbell and Tim Herron and was two shots in front of Mark Wilson, Camilo Villegas and 2009 Heritage winner Brian Gay.
Luke Donald, No. 3 in the world, led a group at 67 in a round slowed by a late afternoon rain delay of 2 hours, 16 minutes. Because of the delay, 18 players were unable to finish before dark.
Donald could move to No. 1 with a win. That might be a tall order if Willis' maintains the putting touch he showed in the first round.
Willis' only PGA Tour victory came at the Touchstone Energy Tucson Open in 2001, also his first start on the PGA Tour. It has been a struggle for Willis to keep his pro career going at times. He fell to 228th on the PGA Tour money list in 2005 and regained his playing privileges in 2009 with a 12th-place finish on the Nationwide Tour money list.
The putting problems surfaced this season as Willis has made only two cuts in eight tournaments, shooting 78-78 last week for an early exit in the Valeor Texas Open. He's 177th in the tour's putting rankings and got fed up giving away strokes on the green.
"We can't make them all. I'm fully aware of that," he said. "But for some reason some of these guys do week in and week out."
Willis was on a full-out search for a winning replacement putter this week. He brought four putters with him, had three more made at Harbour Town and had his father ship in three more. Willis was ready to go with a belly putter he used in Tuesday's practice round and in warmups before his starting time. Suddenly, Willis' resolve disappeared and "Old Faithful" was back.
"I can't pull the trigger," he said.
Willis wasn't so confident in his last-second choice after missing a simple 12-footer for birdie on the first hole. His game -- and attitude -- changed for good on the next hole when he made an 8-foot birdie putt to start his run. "I said, 'Wow, maybe I can make a putt,'" Willis recalled.
Willis one-putted the next five holes, all for birdies, to move in front. Willis' approach shots didn't hurt, either -- all his birdie putts were inside 15 feet. When bogeys on the ninth and 11th holes dropped him back, Willis returned the top thanks to his putter with birdies on the 15th and 16th holes, the last a tricky 15-footer.
"I made putts today that I normally don't make," he said.
Willis had only broken 70 four times in 12 previous rounds at Hilton Head. His low round was a 68 in 2001, Willis' first time playing Harbour Town.
Donald, who won the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in February, is the highest ranked player in the field. He did little to hurt his chance for No. 1, rallying from a sluggish start with three birdies over his final six holes.
"A lot of people are telling me about" becomng No. 1, Donald said. "So it's hard to put out of your brain. But that would be awesome."
Defending champion Jim Furyk and reigning U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell, fifth in the world, were in a pack at 68.
Ernie Els, 15th in the rankings, had a difficult start on a course he traditionally plays well with seven top-10s in 11 appearances. Els switched to a belly putter for the first round and struggled to a 75. Els also incurred a two-stroke penalty on his nex-to-last hole, the eighth, for testing the playing surface by raking a bunker of his footprints before his shot.
All but one of the eight top finishers teed off in the afternoon when the storm blew through Harbour Town and delayed the round. Bill Haas looked like he might chase down Willis with a tap-in birdie on No. 5 once play resumed to move a shot off the lead. But Haas followed with two bogeys and a triple bogey to fall back.
In all, seven of the world's top 20 players teed off in what could be the final Heritage. The tournament, a PGA Tour fixture since 1969, is searching for a title sponsor, something both the tour and event organizers called essential for keeping the springtime tradition on the golf schedule.
DIVOTS: John Daly caused an early morning stir with three birdies his first six holes to take the lead. Bogeys on the seventh and ninth holes dropped him back. He finished with a 70. ... Brian Davis returned to Harbour Town with a 68. Davis called a two-shot penalty on himself in last year's playoff with Furyk when he touched a loose reed with his takeaway. ... Matt Bettencourt's 65 came only days after he totaled his car in a highway wreck on the trip from his home in Upstate South Carolina. Bettencourt said he hit a camper top that fell off the car in front of him on I-26 and he had no choice but to brace for impact. He and his wife, Kim, were not hurt.

Chris Couch and Garrrett Willis share Transitions lead, Sergio Garcia just one back

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Chris Couch's 29 on the back nine Friday is the low nine of the week to date.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
Garrett Willis and Chris Couch are tied for the lead in the Transitions Championship, with Sergio Garcia back in contention in his first PGA Tour event in seven months.
Willis and Couch were at 9-under 133, one shot clear of Garcia and Webb Simpson, who had a 67 in the afternoon. Paul Casey, who led after the first round, had to settle for a 71 and was two shots behind along with Justin Rose (65) and Gary Woodland (68). 
Innisbrook is one of the toughest tracks in Florida, although it was vulnerable in such ideal weather. It's not so much the number of players who produced low scores, rather the high scores that were absent.
As a result, the cut of 1-under 141 was the lowest in tournament history. Going into the weekend, only eight shots separate first from worst, a rarity on the PGA Tour.
Willis is making his own kind of progress.
A year ago, he pened with a 65 to take the first-round lead, then followed that with a 77 and missed the 54-hole cut. He followed his opening 66 with a solid 67 Friday to finish his round atop the leaderboard.
"It's a lot cooler to lead after the second round than it is the first round," Willis said.
Willis lives about 30 minutes away, and the biggest surprise was not seeing his name on the leaderboard, but not seeing the trees sway.
"To have two days like this -- this calm -- is crazy," Willis said. "I think we're in for a pretty windy weekend, because there's no way it's going to continue."
Couch has missed the better part of two years with a shoulder injury, and he wears bracelets to help with his blood flow -- a couple on each side, figuring he needs all the help he can get with his bad health.
The game rarely looked better.
Couch shot a 29 on the back nine of the Copperhead Course, and even his shot into the trees left of the 18th fairway was not a problem. In fact, he hit out of the trees to about 10 feet and had to settle for par.
"I feel like I'm good enough to win," he said.
Along with being tied for the lead, he was equally thrilled that he plays Saturday with Willis, a close friend and frequent practice partner. They practiced together earlier this week, but this time there will be a little more at stake.
Even so, the field is as bunched as ever.
Brandt Snedeker, in his first tournament since becoming a father, had a 64 to lead a group at 6-under 136 that included 17-year-old Matteo Manassero, two-time PGA Tour winner Mark Wilson and Peter Hanson, who had a peculiar day with the putter.
Another shot back was a group that included a trio of U.S. Open champions -- Geoff Ogilvy, Lucas Glover and defending champion Jim Furyk -- while U.S. Amateur champion Peter Uihlein, who still plays at Oklahoma State, made 14 pars in his round of 69 and was at 3-under 139.
Uihlein holed out a 40-yard bunker shot on No. 5 for eagle, then holed out from the fairway for eagle on No. 7. He had two bogeys coming in, but easily made the cut in his second PGA Tour start.
Hanson would not have thought a 67 was in the cards today.
"Other than the four-putt on my first hole, I made a lot of nice birdies," he said.
He had about 25 feet for birdie on the 10th hole and left it 4 feet short. He rammed his par putt about 4 feet by the cup, and missed the next one coming back. Hanson was so frustrated that he decided to change to a cross-handed grip for his fourth putt. That went in, so he stuck with it. After that four-putt double bogey, he took only four putts over the next five holes.
Among those missing the cut were three-time major champion Padraig Harrington and John Daly, who failed to make it to the weekend for the fifth time in six tournaments this year.
Another big name fared so well for the second straight day that it was tough to ignore him.
Garcia is among the most talented players in golf, although his enthusiasm waned so much last year that he decided to take a 10-week break from competition. This is his first time playing in America in seven months.
Passion no longer seems to be an issue.
The 31-year-old Spaniard looked moderately disgusted when birdie putts turned away. He produced a fist pump normally saved for a Sunday when he holed a chip for birdie from behind the 13th green.
About the only thing that went wrong in his round of 66 was when he felt something on the back of his cap as he walked off the 14th tee early in his round. Turns out it was a bee that stung him on his middle finger, although he got the stinger out and all was well.
A par save on the final hole felt even better.
"Just keep trying to do the right things and see what we finish," he said. "I'm not worried about winning. I just want to keep building confidence into my head, and these rounds obviously help. If we go out there tomorrow and shoot another round, beautiful. If not, that's fine. I've just got to make sure that I keep building up."

Barcelo leads Nationwide Tour Chitimacha Louisiana Open after 14 one-putt greens

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By 
PGA.com news services 

Series:
Rich Barcelo fired a 6-under 65 Thursday morning and grabbed the first-round lead at the Chitiamacha Louisiana Open, the first domestic stop on the 2011 Nationwide Tour schedule. Barcelo closed with a 35-foot birdie putt on his final hole to separate himself by one stroke from a trio of others.
Scott Gardiner, Aaron Watkins and Carl Paulson all posted 5-under 66s at the Le Triomphe Country Club course and share second place.
Bob Heintz, Matthew Giles, Michael Thompson, Fran Quinn and 2003 champion Brett Wetterich are knotted at 67, two strokes back.
Barcelo was 1 over through his first seven holes on the back nine, but then turned things while battling a wind that changed the complexion of the course.
“It was playing 180 degrees different today than it did Tuesday in the practice round,” said Barcelo, who is making his eighth start in this event dating back to 1999. “I’ve been here a lot and I’ve seen all the wind conditions.”
Thursday’s wind came out of north-northeast and turned some difficult holes on the back nine from lions to lambs. The 485-yard 14th usually plays into a headwind and was the second-toughest par 4 on Tour last year, yielding only 16 total birdies over four days. The field chalked up a record 15 birdies there today.
“I hit 3-wood into the green for my second shot there the other day,” said Barcelo. “Today, it was a 9-iron.”
Barcelo’s lead was threatened during much of the afternoon by Paulson, a 40-year-old veteran who has played very little competitive golf over the past 5 ½ years thanks to a series of back problems.
Paulson opened his round with back-to-back birdies before he aced the 199-yard third hole with a perfect 5-iron. It was his first hole-in-one since the second round of the 1999 Cleveland Open.
Paulson got to 7 under through 15 before suffering two bogeys on his final three holes.
“I think mentally I got a little tired but that will sharpen up,” he said.
So will the field as players begin to get their sea legs under them to begin the year. The Tour opened with tournaments in Panama and Colombia, both of which were plagued by weather. The latter, the Pacific Rubiales Bogota Open, was hampered by daily thunderstorms that eventually forced the tournament to be cut to 36 holes.
“It’s hard to get any momentum going because you have to go home for a couple of weeks,” said Watkins, who posted a second-round 65 to match the course record in South America and was within striking distance when officials were forced to cancel the third round. “It’s tough because when I go home I usually sit on the couch for four or five days. I putted good the last round in Colombia, which gave me a little momentum coming into this week.”
First-Round Notes:
--Leading money winner Brenden Pappas had five birdies and a triple bogey while shooting a 2-under 70. Pappas captured the weather-plagued Pacific Rubiales Bogota Open, which was shortened to 36 holes, two weeks ago.
--Veteran Mike Heinen of nearby Lake Charles, La., is making his 16th start in this event, which is celebrating its 20th annual visit to LeTriomphe CC. Heinen posted a 1-under 70. Heinen, who teed it up in the tournament’s inaugural event in 1992, has made the cut 13 times in his previous 15 starts with his best finish a runner-up in 2002.
--Paul Claxton (5-over 76) is also no newcomer to Lafayette. Claxton is making his 15th career start here this week. The Georgia native won the tournament in 2001 and was also runner-up in 2007. He has made the cut in eight of his previous 14 starts.
--Jake Younan-Wise had a pair of eagles on the front nine. He eagled the par-5 first hole and the par-5 fifth hole. Those were the only sub-par holes for the former Texas Tech Red Raider, who wound up shooting a 4-over 75.
--Carl Paulson recorded an ace at the 199-yard third hole. Paulson used a 5-iron for his hole-in-one, the 15th in tournament history. Paulson needed only eight total strokes for his first three holes, which covered 1,140 yards. Paulson started his day birdie-birdie-eagle and was 4 under through three holes.
--The 485-yard 14th hole was the second-toughest par 4 on the Nationwide Tour last year. The hole, which normally plays into the wind, yielded only 16 birdies over four days and had a scoring average of 4.430. With the wind at the players’ backs Thursday, the hole gave up 15 birdies and played to a scoring average of 4.273. Friday’s forecast is for the winds to shift to the south-southeast at 10-20 mph, with gusts to 25 mph.
--The 14th hole was changed in 2006 from a 540-yard par 5 to a 485-yard par 4. In the past five years, there have been an average of 5.4 birdies on that hole per round. Thursday, there was an all-time, single-round high of 15 birdies registered. This was only the third time in 21 total rounds since it was changed to a par 4 that double-digit birdies were recorded. There were 11 in the opening round in 2007 and 10 in the opening round in 2009.
--The 555-yard first hole, playing straight downwind, was the easiest hole on the course. The hole yielded 11 eagles and 79 birdies on the day compared to 47 and six bogeys. The hole played to a scoring average of 4.336.
--Martin Flores uncorked the day’s longest drive, a 377-yard shot at the 485-yard 14th hole. Flores ranked No. 11 on the PGA Tour in Average Driving Distance (300.7 yards) and his longest drive of the year was a 365-yard shot at the Reno-Tahoe Open.
--Scott Gardiner (66) celebrated his 35th birthday on Tuesday. Jeff Brehaut withdrew prior to the start of the round and was replaced in the field by Frank Lickliter II. Todd Bailey withdrew during the first round due to a back injury. Aron Price (68) was a perfect 13 of 13 in fairways hit.
--Rich Barcelo (65) had 14 one-putt greens, and only 20 official putts for his round. Fran Quinn (67) had 21 total putts. On the other hand, John Mallinger (75) had 20 putts on the front nine and 37 total. He finished at 4 over par despite hitting 15 greens in regulation.

Bombers to square off as Bubba Watson and JB Holmes make Accenture quarters

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Bubba Watson has been so dominant this week that he's played only 43 holes in three matches.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
J.B. Holmes and Bubba Watson are in the quarterfinals of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, and it's not hard to figure out how they got there.
In fact, you could say it's elementary.
Holmes has five of the longest drives this week at The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, including a 400-yard shot in the opening round. He wasn't always straight, but he was long enough to keep himself in the game and win the last two holes against Jason Day on Friday.
Watson didn't win his match against Geoff Ogilvy on the par-5 11th hole, but it sure felt that way. Already 2 up in his match, Watson was 290 from the hole when he ripped a 3-iron with a tight draw that bounded onto the green and settled about 15 feet away.
"I knew if I hit a bullet 3-iron, it could roll up close," Watson said. "We were just thinking about getting it on the green. We were thinking about missing it left, so we'd have an easy chip up on the slope. I knew it was good. I saw where it was running and it worked out in my favor again. I swung as hard as I could at a low, bullet 3-iron."
Three holes later, the match was over, 6 and 4.
"It's never fun to lose," said Ogilvy, a two-time champion of this fickle event. "But it's the first time I've played OK and lost. He played well. He hit great shots. I didn't play that bad. I didn't play '6-and-4' bad."
That set up more fireworks for Saturday morning -- Holmes vs. Watson, two of the longest hitters on the PGA Tour, head-to-head on a course nearly 7,800 yards long in the high desert with wind expected to top 20 mph.
"It should be fun," Holmes said. "Me and Bubba move it out there pretty good."
Their explosive play shifted the focus from youth to power in the third round, as the kids got sent home -- 17-year-old Matteo Manassero, 22-year-old Rickie Fowler and the 23-year-old Day all lost their matches.
The youngest player still around also is the best -- Martin Kaymer, the highest seed left at No. 2. The "Germanator" can move up to No. 1 in the world if he wins two matches on Saturday to reach the championship match.
"If I can get up one more spot in the world rankings, of course I wouldn't mind it," Kaymer said. "But I think I'll have a chance the next few weeks, months, as well."
Getting to Saturday wasn't easy, of course. Kaymer trailed by two holes until winning the 13th and 14th, then surged ahead on the par-3 16th when he hit a 3-iron into a stiff breeze to 12 feet for birdie.
Even so, it was the end that was painful to watch as it stirred Ryder Cup memories of Mahan.
Kaymer was 1 up and went long and left with his approach. Mahan did the same, and needed to at least escape with par to have any chance. Instead, he muffed yet another chip that barely got up the hill, well short of the green. He chipped long and made double bogey.
Mahan also flubbed a chip at the Ryder Cup on the 17th hole, although he was a long shot to win his match against Graeme McDowell. Still, it was an image that sticks among the key moments from Wales, and his finish against Kaymer won't help erase that memory.
Kaymer advances to play Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain, at 47 the oldest player in the field, who gave Ben Crane another short day at the office. Crane, whose 8-and-7 win on Thursday was the second-largest margin in tournament history, didn't make a birdie until the 11th hole against Jimenez and lost, 7 and 6.
With cold weather due on the final day, the schedule was changed to avoid frost delays. The quarterfinals will be Saturday morning, followed by the semifinals. The 18-hole final match will be Sunday afternoon.
In other matches:
-- Matt Kuchar won three straight holes to start the back nine as Fowler ventured into the desert, and while the kid tried to rally, Kuchar closed him out on the 17th hole.
-- Luke Donald never trailed in beating Manassero, although the Italian teen pushed him to the 16th hole.
-- Ryan Moore holed a 10-foot birdie putt on the 19th hole to defeat Nick Watney, who had birdied the last two holes to extend the match. In a cruel example of match play, Watney had nine birdies in 19 holes and lost, while Kuchar made only three birdies in 17 holes to beat Fowler. Moore is the lowest seed still alive at No. 48.
-- Y.E. Yang continued his surprising run by beating McDowell, winning the last three holes with birdies, including a chip-in from behind the 16th green for a 3-and-2 victory.
Watson's performance has been so dominant that he has led every hole he has played for three days. He has won the opening hole all three rounds and closed out matches on the 16th hole, 13th hole and 14th hole.
"Hit a lot of good putts, a lot of good iron shots. Haven't missed that many fairways, probably no more than five all three days," Watson said. "So it's been good so far. And I've won every time, so it works out."
No one feels more grateful than Holmes, who didn't even get into the 64-man field until Tuesday when Tim Clark withdrew. He took over the No. 22 seed in the bracket, but technically could be considered No. 65. The lowest seed to win was Kevin Sutherland at No. 62 in 2002.
Holmes only saw this course for the first time Wednesday when he beat Camilo Villegas. He is not driving it straight, but it is going long. That power figures to be on full display against Watson on Saturday.
And if this format were not already unpredictable, watch out for the wind.
"If that puts more people in the desert, that will give me an advantage," Holmes said. "I've been practicing out of there."