Woods, Rose tied for halfway lead at Tour Championship
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[September 22, 2018]
(Reuters) - Ryder Cup
hostilities broke out a week early at the Tour Championship on
Friday with Tiger Woods and world number one Justin Rose sharing the
halfway lead after a pulsating second round in Atlanta.
American Woods and England's Rose, who will face off on opposite
sides next week in the biennial team event in Paris, at one stage
built a three-shot lead over their closest rivals in the 30-man
field.
They both butchered the 16th hole, however, and eventually signed
for seven-under-par 133 and a two-stroke advantage over Northern
Irishman Rory McIlroy at East Lake.
Woods took pride in shooting two-under 68 and earning his first
halfway lead since the 2015 Wyndham Championship, despite not quite
firing on all cylinders.
"I didn't hit it very good overall today, didn't quite have the
sharpness I had yesterday and it was pretty evident," Woods told
reporters.
"This is a grinder's golf course. You've got to keep hanging in
there and make a lot of pars and I did that today ... I ground out a
round and shot something under par."
Rose was also pleased with his score, a 67, on a day when he was
unable to replicate his first round driving.
"It's just hard to hit a ton of fairways," he told Golf Channel.
"Yesterday I hit a ton of fairways, and I felt like it was an easy
course, but today was much more of a struggle."
Woods, a 14-times major champion who has not won this year in an
otherwise impressive comeback following spinal fusion surgery in
2017, delighted his overflowing gallery when he ran in consecutive
birdies at the 14th and 15th holes.
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Tiger Woods reacts on the seventh hole during the second round of
the Tour Championship golf tournament at East Lake Golf Club.
Mandatory Credit: Butch Dill-USA TODAY Sports
But he yanked his drive into punishing rough at the par-four 16th
and could only advance his second shot into a bunker, where his ball
plugged, forcing him to blast out sideways and leading to a
double-bogey.
"The rough's brutal," Woods said. "Every ball sits right down the
bottom. There are no good lies. You've just got to hit and hope."
While Woods could win on Sunday and still not necessarily claim the
season-long FedExCup points race and the $10 million bonus that goes
with it, Rose's fate is in his own hands.
He started the week second in the standings behind Bryson DeChambeau,
who appears to be out of contention after a 75 that left him equal
second-last.
"It's all very well winning tournaments," Rose said. "There's just
something extra about winning a season-long thing.
"I was able to do that in Europe in '07 and it gave me a tremendous
amount of pride but to do it against the best players in the world
on this tour would be incredible."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina, editing by Pritha
Sarkar/Nick Mulvenney)
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