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Kenny
Perry leads in to the weekend
Kenny Perry went to the PGA Tour’s weekly Bible
study in the home of Fred Funk, and if the message was
about storing up treasures in heaven, the 47-year-old Perry
found inspiration from a more tangible prize.
Three years ago, Funk won The Players Championship at
48, making him the oldest winner of this prestigious event.
Perry snooped around the house and found the crystal trophy,
rubbing his hands on it.
“I got a good look at his trophy,” Perry said
Friday. “That guy inspired me.”
In demanding conditions on the scary Stadium Course—wind
that gusted to 35 mph and temperatures that pushed 90—Perry
kept his wits and his patience on his way to a 2-under
70 to build a one-shot lead.
It was the kind of day that can turn hair gray, not that
the leaders needed any help.
Bernhard Langer—who also was at Funk’s house
on Wednesday night—raced up the leaderboard with
a 67 and will play with Perry in the final pairing Saturday,
two guys who are a combined 97 years old.
Langer already has won twice this year—on the Champions
Tour.
The two-time Masters champion and former Ryder Cup captain
thought about withdrawing Thursday morning when he felt
pain in his lower back, which caused his groin and left
knee to ache, along with his left shoulder. All those creaking
joints, and the 50-year-old Langer still managed to entertain
hopes of winning against a field that includes some players
who weren’t even born when he won his first Masters.
“I think I can win,” Langer said.
Paul Goydos, 43, also was one shot behind, although he
didn’t attribute his fine play to experience.
“I’m more journeyman than veteran,” said
Goydos, who has won only twice in his 15 years on tour.
Crashing the party—naptime might be more apropos—was
Sergio Garcia, the 28-year-old Spaniard whose driving was
as spectacular as his putting was atrocious. Garcia hit
all 14 fairways, missed only three greens and took 33 putts
on his way to a 73.
What cost him the 36-hole lead was a double bogey on the
island-green 17th without ever going into the water.
Garcia’s tee shot went over the back of the green
and rolled down the artificial turf path, leaving him a
chip over a corner of the water. His shot came out hot,
rolled off the green and only a slight rise in the first
cut of rough kept it dry. He chipped weakly and missed
another putt, then missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the last.
“I probably deserved a little bit more than what
I got,” Garcia said.
Perry didn’t do anything spectacular. He made birdies
on a pair of the par 5s, a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 1
and a hybrid that rolled into a tough lie on the bunker
at the downwind, par-3 eighth, leading to his only bogey.
Nerves were tough to control, however, in steady 20 mph
that gusted and swirled through the pines and made every
shot a challenge even on the few holes that have no water
hazards.
“It was the kind of day where you could shoot a
big number in a hurry,” Perry said. “You’re
at the mercy of the wind. It was hard to ever feel comfortable
on any tee shot.”
Anthony Kim said he hit the ball better than he has in
his last six rounds for a 70. This is the same guy who
won last week at the Wachovia Championship by setting a
tournament record.
Kim was at 4-under 140 and will get another round with
Boo Weekley, who shot 71 and was at 141. Weekley brought
some levity on an otherwise grim day at No. 8, when they
stooped to inspect a turtle. Kim was lightly touching the
shell when Weekley screamed out, making Kim nearly jump
out of his shoes.
“I think that’s why we probably both missed
those 5-footers on that hole,” Kim said.
Otherwise, it was a grind.
Rich Beem was only five shots out of the lead with four
holes when he took double bogey on the 15th from the trees,
hit into the water on the par-5 16th and made bogey, found
the water on the island-green 17th for double bogey, then
pumped two tee shots into the water on the 18th to finish
with a quadruple bogey. He wound up with an 80 and missed
the cut by five shots.
Padraig Harrington bogeyed six of his final seven holes
for a 78 and also left early. The cut was at 3-over 147.
The biggest surprise was Langer, who first played The
Players Championship in 1984 when Garcia was barely out
of diapers and Kim was not born.
He fired a 3-wood into 8 feet for eagle on No. 2, followed
that up with birdies on the fourth and fifth holes, took
the outright lead with a 15-foot birdie on the eighth and
was poised to shoot 30 on the front until dumping a wedge
into the bunker left of the green on the par-5 ninth, making
bogey for the second straight day.
“I felt like throwing up,” Langer said. “When
you make 6 on a hole when you’re 80 yards away, feels
worse than when you’re playing bad. I had a long
walk from there to (No.) 10 and had a little bit of a talk.”
But he got one of the loudest roars on the scariest hole.
His tee shot barely cleared the wooden planks guarding
the 17th green, and from there he used his long-handle
putter to roll in a 60-foot birdie.
When it all ended, 15 players remained under par, a group
that included Fred Couples at 2-under 142, with defending
champion Phil Mickelson and Ernie Els at 143.
“Basically, right now we’re still just pace
cars,” Goydos said. “We’re going to wait
and see what happens on the weekend when the racing starts.
But it’s a good place to start the weekend off.
“If nothing else, you get to sleep in.”
Considering the age of some of these guys, they could
probably use it. |