Updated at 3:48 p.m., Friday, October 19, 2007
Golf: Moore leads PGA tourney, Hawaii's Wilson makes cut
Associated Press
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) Ryan Moore had a talk with himself a week ago after a third-round meltdown in Las Vegas. He must have been a good listener.The bearded 24-year-old former U.S. Amateur champion matched his career low round with a 7-under 63 on Friday to take a three-stroke lead halfway through the Fry's Electronics Open at Grayhawk Golf Club. Moore, who has three second-place finishes in his three years on the tour, was at 11-under 129.
Hawaii's Dean Wilson made the cut by shooting a second-round 68 and was nine strokes off the pace at 2-under-par 138. Parker McLachlin shot a second-round 68, but his two-round total of 2-over 142 missed the cut by two strokes.
Moore, who underwent surgery on his left hand a year ago, said a minor change in his grip made all the difference.
"I just felt comfortable out there," he said. "I've played well on this golf course before. I actually won a tournament (Thunderbird International Junior) here when I was 18. I just struck the ball well and gave myself a lot of chances."
Australian Mark Hensby was one of three tied at 8-under 132 after a career-low round of 61. Ben Crane and Daisuke Maruyama also were at 132. Canadian Mike Weir, the 2003 Masters champion, joined Carl Pettersson and Nick Watney four shots back at 7-under 133.
The event's biggest name, Phil Mickelson, shot 70 for a 1-over 141 and missed the cut.
Moore has finished second three times, including the Memorial in June, but has never won since turning pro after the 2005 Masters. He said he's been inconsistent since last year's surgery.
He was at 12 under after his eighth birdie of the day, on the par-4, 332-yard 15th, before losing a stroke with a bogey on the 17th.
"Something just kind of clicked and made sense to me after the round Saturday (in Las Vegas)," Moore said. "I played absolutely terrible on Saturday. I just was so frustrated, I went and sat down for about 30 minutes, just had a Coke and sat there and was like, `All right, I can't take this anymore, shooting 76s on Saturday. It's just driving me crazy."'
Then he thought of a minor adjustment to his hand position he might make.
"Something started making a little bit of sense to me," he said, "and I went out on the range and tried it and it's exactly what I've been missing for the last, you know, year, really."
Hensby said this is his first time playing the 7,125-yard Raptor course at the Grayhawk Golf Club in north Scottsdale, where it was sunny and the temperature reached 90 degrees.
"I went to Geoff Ogilvy's wedding here," he said. "That was the only time."
The tournament, in its first year, is part of the PGA Tour Fall Series. The purse is $5 million, with $900,000 going to the winner. It's an event that could make or break players scrambling to finish in the top 125 on the money list to keep their tour card.
Hensby entered the tournament ranked 151st.
"That's why it's exciting," he said, "because a guy can be having the worst year of his life, and win, and all of a sudden he's having a great year."
With so many PGA Tours pros living in the Scottsdale area, the field was the strongest of the seven Fall Series events, led by Mickelson, the No. 2 tour's money winner behind Tiger Woods and a Grayhawk member.
But three weeks after his strong performance in the Presidents Cup, Mickelson missed the cut by a stroke on a course he has played hundreds of times.
"I didn't think I played that poorly, I just scored terribly," he said. "Every time I made a birdie, I followed it with a bogey and never got anything going."
It was a bad year for Mickelson in his former home state. He also missed the cut in the FBR Open, held just down the road at TPC Scottsdale in early February.
"Missing a cut is just missing a cut," he said. "It's just frustrating every way you look at it, whether it's a major, whether it's a tour event or your home course like Grayhawk, it's always frustrating."
Among other notables who missed the cut were FBR winner Aaron Baddeley (141), John Daly (141) and David Duval (144).
Weir was just three weeks removed from his emotional victory in his native Canada over Tiger Woods in the Presidents Cup. Weir followed an opening 69 with a 6-under 64.
First-round leader Michael Allen, who lives a 10-minute drive from Grayhawk, began the day with a two-shot lead after an 8-under 63 in the first round. But he shot a 1-over 72 on Friday and was in a group of 10 five back at 6-under 134.
Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee, who lives in Scottsdale, made his first PGA Tour appearance in three years, and it was a short one. He finished at 3-over 143 and missed the cut.