Woods shows steel in major game of mind over matter
World No 1 fights through pain barrier in remarkable back nine to put himself in the mi
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Your support makes all the difference.Such is the supreme focus of Tiger Woods he was perhaps the only person who arrived here for the third round of the US Open yesterday without the images of an incredible Friday night replaying over and over in his mind. Yes, here is the ultimate creature of the here and now, who has turned a truth on its head. "Those who choose not to remember the past are condemned to repeat it" – or so the saying goes. It seemed that once again Woods' rivals were about to be condemned by his refusal to bask in the limelight of one of his more remarkable rounds.
What was certain was that the locker room found itself unable to switch off from the immediate past and was still filled by the amazed whispers of Tiger's 68 and of a back nine during which he not only defied the uncompromising reputation of US Open golf but also a few laws of medical science.
The 32-year-old shot the second lowest score for nine holes in the tournament's 113-year history – 30. And he did so on one leg. Just another chapter in a legend positively creaking with the previously impossible, then. One shot stood out above all others as Woods reduced his playing partner, a certain Phil Mickelson, to a bungling bystander.
He was on the first (his 10th) and after a frontward half characterised by a mix of sloppiness (four bogeys) and brilliance (one eagle), a clearly frustrated Woods had sliced a drive into a position that was to test his courage as well as his shot-making. Needless to say, he passed both.
"I just happened to get a great break," said Woods, referring to his ball nestling just to the left of a tree, a few inches from a cart path. "Not only did I have a swing and a stance, but I also had a lie where I could control my distance. And it was just an eight-iron up there. Put the ball in the centre of the green and move on. I wasn't trying to do anything in particular with that shot."
He made it sound so simple but most, if not all, of the competitors here would have taken the free drop available to move away from that cart path. After all, wearing metal spikes on concrete and turning the body ferociously enough to effect a club speed of over 100mph does not figure in the manual of how best to recover from knee surgery you underwent two months ago.
Yet Woods somehow blanked out the agony he knew was about to rattle around his joint and with a huge grimace he cajoled the ball to 20 feet. "That's part of the deal," he said. "That's part of wearing metal spikes. I would much rather have the lie."
And so began the series of devastating putts that took him from seven behind the lead to within one of Stuart Appleby on three-under. Woods said: "They just started flying in from anywhere." Suddenly the US Open was not the US Open any more. It had been transformed from the annual slog, the traditional par bore, into an enthralling birdie-fest. And how the crowd reacted. Never has a Friday at America's national championship been played out to such a cacophony.
The USGA's decision to group the world Nos 1 and 2 together was a bold move that, in terms of generating atmosphere, paid off. It will be interesting to see if the other majors follow the lead. What it does is give the opening two days an added frisson, almost a Sunday feel.
But there were ugly scenes on the "super-group's" final hole when the caddie of Adam Scott, the world No 3, was reported to have jumped through the ropes and clashed with two fans. Tony Navarro, who used to carry Greg Norman's bag, could well be sanctioned by the USGA, particularly if it is proved that he headbutted one of the hecklers, an accusation he denies.
As it was, after the intervention of Mickelson's caddy, Jim Mackay, who went looking for the police, the two rowdy fans, a father and son, were arrested and spent the night in a local jail. Whether the increased intensity surrounding the marquee pairing contributed to the fracas will have to be decided, although it would be a shame if two over-fuelled members of the gallery and one over-enthusiastic caddy influence the prospects of any future early-round rematch.
After his experience – in which he saw a one-shot advantage swing around by seven during Tiger's charge – Mickelson might not be too keen anyway. Particularly if and when he reads the inquest. The yarn will go that if he and the others can't beat Tiger when he is limping this badly, then they may as well all hobble off into the sunset.
Yesterday afternoon, Robert Karlsson had the honour of seeing first hand if Woods could keep on popping. The Swede was one of five Europeans in the top 10, one of seven in the top 20. And with Englishmen of the quality of Lee Westwood and Luke Donald on one-under and level respectively, it was especially promising for British golf as it scanned the 38 years back to Tony Jacklin's one and only US Open success.
If Tiger was not in attendance it would surely have been odds-on for one of Nick Faldo's Ryder Cuppers to prevail. Yet he is and they were all trying to figure out a way to beat him. "I'll be doing my best to accidentally throw a club towards his sore knee," said Appleby with a wink. "It would be an accident, of course."
The leaderboard
(US unless stated)
216
Mike Weir (Can) 73 74
217
Brandt Snedeker 76 73 68
Brandt Jobe 73 75 69
218
Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 74 73 71
219
Ryuji Imada (Japan) 74 75 70
Anthony Kim 74 75 70
Boo Weekley 73 76 70
Jeff Quinney 79 70 70
Eric Axley 69 79 71
220
Steve Stricker 73 76 71
Chad Campbell 77 72 71
David Toms 76 72 72
Trevor Immelman (SA) 75 73 72
Michael Thompson 74 73 73
Joe Ogilvie 71 76 73
221
Todd Hamilton 74 74 73
222
Andrew Svoboda 77 71 74
Justin Leonard 75 72 75
Jonathan Mills (Can) 72 75 75
Matt Kuchar 73 73 76
223
Heath Slocum 75 74 74
Alastair Forsyth (GB) 76 73 74
Jarrod Lyle (Aus) 75 74 74
Justin Hicks 68 80 75
Pat Perez 75 73 75
Daniel Chopra (Swe) 73 75 75
224
Ian Leggatt (Can) 72 76 76
Soren Hansen (Den) 78 80 76
Ben Crane 75 72 77
225
Rickie Fowler 70 79 76
Vijay Singh (Fiji) 71 78 76
Paul Casey (GB) 79 70 76
Nick Watney 73 75 77
Stephen Ames (Can) 74 74 77
226
Jesper Parnevik (Swe) 77 72 77
Ross McGowan (GB) 76 72 78
John Mallinger 73 75 78
227
Chris Kirk 75 74 78
228
Andrew Dresser 76 73 79
Rich Beem 74 74 80
Second round
139
Stuart Appleby (Aus) 69 70
140
Rocco Mediate 69 71
Robert Karlsson (Swe) 70 70
Tiger Woods 72 68
141
D J Trahan 72 69
Davis Love III 72 69
Lee Westwood (GB) 70 71
Miguel Angel Jimenez (Sp)75 66
142
Luke Donald (GB) 71 71
Robert Allenby (Aus) 70 72
Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 69 73
Ernie Els (SA) 70 72
Carl Pettersson (Swe) 71 71
143
John Rollins 75 68
Oliver Wilson (GB) 72 71
144
Robert Dinwiddie (GB) 73 71
Scott Verplank 72 72
Camilo Villegas (Col) 73 71
Woody Austin 72 72
Rod Pampling (Aus) 74 70
Andres Romero (Arg) 71 73 145
Kevin Streelman 68 77
Bart Bryant 75 70
Stewart Cink 72 73
Retief Goosen (SA) 76 69
Padraig Harrington (Ire) 78 67
Martin Kaymer (Ger) 75 70
Rory Sabbatini (SA) 73 72
John Merrick 73 72
Jim Furyk 74 71
Tim Clark (SA) 73 72
D A Points 74 71
Patrick Sheehan 71 74
Brett Quigley 73 72
146
Sergio Garcia (Sp) 76 70
Hunter Mahan 72 74
Derek Fathauer 73 73
Dustin Johnson 74 72
Adam Scott (Aus) 73 73
Phil Mickelson 71 75
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