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How well he can hold up on the weekend is the question, for Friday required supreme concentration.
"I tried to give as much self-talk as I could give out there to myself, hang in there, grind it out, kind of meander up to the ball and see if I could flip a switch for about four seconds, and go back to being a zombie," he said.
It seemed to work, especially during his stretch of birdies on the back nine.
"Pretty impressive," said his caddie, Lance Bennett, who has a raspy voice and sounds very much like the boss these days.
Wi is No. 37 in the standings and is closer than ever to his first Tour Championship, which comes with a spot in three of the majors.
"For me to play well, I knew that I had to stay in the present and just play one hole at a time," he said. "Actually, I wrote that down on my pin sheet every day so I look at it if I were to get ahead of myself."
A year ago, the 36-hole leaders were at 7-under 135, and Woods went on to win by eight shots at 19 under. A score like that seems unlikely on greens that are inconsistent because of summer heat and recent rain.
Cog Hill is getting a steady stream of criticism, from the rough shape of the greens to the makeover by Rees Jones. Geoff Ogilvy was in a decent mood when he walked off the 18th green with a 72, putting him at 3-over 145.
He was asked why so many players don't seem to like Cog Hill, and the Australian was as insightful as ever.
"The short answer is it's just not enjoyable to play," he said. "Look, if your mission is to really punish a slightly bad shot and make it really hard all day, then it's a success. If your mission is to create a place people enjoy playing, then it's a failure."
He was asked if he was enjoying himself, and Ogilvy laughed.
"Are you mad?" he said.
Kuchar isn't enjoying himself at all, yet he couldn't be more happy. He was atop the leaderboard, and going to bed.
[Associated Press;
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