Pouring in birdies from distances great and small, Woods tamed Torrey Pines, shooting 5-under 30 over his final nine holes in the second round Friday to end at 2-under par. That was one stroke behind Stuart Appleby and tied with Rocco Mediate and Robert Karlsson.
Poor guys.
"People always ask me, 'Who's the favorite?'" Mediate said. "Well, of course, he's the favorite. Of course he is. A lot of people said,
'Well, he's not going to win because he's had, whatever, a thousand weeks off. But he's different. It's not the same."
Playing in his first tournament since knee surgery after the Masters, Woods hardly looked like someone rounding back into shape, at least not at the end. He started on the back, and after an up-and-down nine holes, things turned around immediately.
He made five birdies and finished one shot off the U.S. Open record for lowest nine-hole score, last accomplished by Vijay Singh in 2003. He finished the day with a 3-under 68.
"I felt if I could play well, could get back to even par, I could get back into the championship," Woods said. "Then all of the sudden, I started raining
'em in from everywhere."
He will play Saturday with Karlsson, a 3-and-2 loser to Woods in a meaningless Ryder Cup match two years ago. Karlsson shot 1-under 70 for the second straight day to find himself paired with the world's best player.
"It's definitely a treat," Karlsson said. "But it could go the other (way) as well."
Appleby has the lead thanks to a 45-foot putt on No. 18 after hitting his approach out of a divot. He shot 70, and his final putt dropped 11 players more than 10 shots off the lead and sent them home for the weekend.
This will be the second time in 14 months that he's played in the final group of a major on the weekend. Last year in Augusta, he was paired with Woods in the final round and shot 3-over 75 to slide to seventh. He'll be working with a different game plan this time.
"It's just a matter of playing golf. He wants to go play golf, we want to go play golf," Appleby said. "And I'll be doing my best to accidentally throw a club towards his sore knee. It will be an accident, of course."
But really, how to stop what looks like an unstoppable march toward victory?
Woods is in search of his 14th major win and his first U.S. Open since 2002. His seven closest pursuers (OK, so Appleby isn't officially a
'pursuer') have combined for one: the PGA championship won by Davis Love III more than a decade ago.