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"Luckily, I was able to keep the momentum in the good stretch I had in Boston going into today," Simpson said. "We got off to a really good start and made a few really good saves there in the middle of the round and finished with a couple birdies coming in. It was a good day for the tough course and tough conditions we were facing."
Simpson made it sound simple, which is how golf can feel when a player is winning.
It wasn't that way for everyone.
Dustin Johnson, the defending champion at Cog Hill, sputtered at the start and then stumbled at the turn, making five bogeys for a 40 on his back nine for a 76. Jason Day had a 77, while Bubba Watson was wild off the tee and didn't make a single birdie in his round of 78.
Phil Mickelson nearly joined them. He took double bogey on the par-3 second hole when his flop shot from the other side of the green only went one-third of the way toward the hole and stayed in the collar of the rough. Another towering flop shot wound up 12 feet by the hole. Lefty was 4 over through five holes, but ran off four birdies and salvaged a 72.
Mickelson was among the strongest critics of Cog Hill -- not the Jemsek family, but the decision to hire Rees Jones to redesign the public course with hopes of landing a U.S. Open that it didn't get despite the $5 million in renovation.
Wilson loves Cog Hill, and he doesn't take the criticism personally. Still, he thinks players are missing the point.
"It hurts a little bit that Frank Jemsek is such a nice man," Wilson said. "The Jemsek family has done so much for public golf here in Chicago, and all my neighbors come out and play here, all these courses, and Cog Hill is one that everybody knows around here in Chicago. To have the pros maybe not like it ... it doesn't hurt my feelings really, it's just that there's more to Cog Hill than just a one-week golf tournament for the pros."
For one week, much is at stake.
The top 30 from the 70-man field advance to the Tour Championship next week in Atlanta, with $10 million at stake for the winner of the FedEx Cup. Among those who helped their chances Thursday were Jim Furyk and Camilo Villegas, each with a 68.
Villegas narrowly got into the FedEx Cup playoffs, starting at No. 109, and now has the Tour Championship in his sights. But he's not about to start looking ahead to where he has to finish or how he gets to East Lake.
"Who cares where you are right now," Villegas said. "It's all about just playing good golf from here the next three days and hopefully advancing."
[Associated Press;
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