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    Thursday, May 02, 2024

    Golf roundup

    Swafford shoots second 65, leads in rainy La Quinta

    Hudson Swafford beat the rain Friday in the CareerBuilder Challenge, and Phil Mickelson played his best in the worst of the conditions.

    Then, there's Danny Lee.

    "I actually wanted to play in the rain, so I could experiment with myself," Lee said. "Hopefully, it rains tomorrow."

    The New Zealander probably won't get his wish Saturday, but another storm could pass through the desert oasis Sunday afternoon.

    Swafford finished just before the rain moved in, shooting his second straight 7-under 65 to take a one-stroke lead. Winless in his four-year PGA Tour career, the former Georgia star had a bogey-free round on the Jack Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West after opening the pro-am tournament Thursday at La Quinta Country Club.

    "Managed to keep the ball in the fairway," Swafford said. "That gives you a lot of nice approach shots into greens. I'm driving the ball beautifully."

    The rain-seeking Lee and first-round leader Dominic Bozzelli were tied for second.

    Lee closed with a birdie for a 64 at La Quinta, far exceeding his expectations after a month off.

    "Just trying to break 80, seriously," Lee said. "Trying to not shoot something overly ridiculous, since I'm playing with the amateurs."

    Bozzelli followed an opening 64 on PGA West's Stadium Course with a 67 at La Quinta.

    "It wasn't my best today, but I was able to save par, made some pretty big par saves throughout the round and kept it going," Bozzelli said. "Actually, pretty lucky that weather held off a little bit longer than I thought it would."

    The tee times were moved up an hour to 7:30 a.m., and Swafford and many players finished before the storm rolled in over the San Jacinto Mountains at about 1 p.m.

    "I had a full rain suit, five towels in the bag," said Swafford, coming off a tie for 13th last week in Hawaii in the Sony Open. "My caddie was griping all day about how heavy it was. But I made a few birdies early and he said the bag was getting a little lighter."

    Mickelson got to use all of his rain gear, playing the final six holes in intermittent showers in the second-to-last group off the 10th tee on the Nicklaus course. The tournament ambassador followed an opening 68 at La Quinta with a 66 to reach 10 under in his return from two sports hernia surgeries.

    "I hit a lot more good shots today than I did yesterday, but I'm still hitting some really bad ones," said Mickelson, the 2002 and 2004 winner. "And that's fine. It's to be expected. I knew that was going to happen, but I've been able to kind of manage those and get away with some pars."

    The 46-year-old Mickelson had surgery Oct. 19 — three days after tying for eighth in the season-opening Safeway Open — and again Dec. 12.

    Lefty made a 15-foot eagle putt on the par-5 11th — his second hole — and holed a bunker shot for birdie on the par-4 first. In the rain, he birdied Nos. 4-6 and closed with three pars with the wind picking up.

    "It was really hard in these conditions," Mickelson said. "I actually made some birdies in these conditions, so I felt very fortunate with the score that I had in this weather. The back nine I played some really good golf."

    Brendan Steele, the Safeway winner from the nearby mountain town of Idyllwild, was two strokes back at 12 under with Brian Harman. Steele shot a 64 on the Nicklaus layout, birdieing four of the last six holes.

    Langer takes one-shot lead over Couples at Hualalai

    Bernhard Langer closed with back-to-back birdies to shoot a 7-under 65 for a 15-under-129 total and a one-shot lead over Fred Couples after the second round of the Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai in Hawaii.

    Langer began the day tied for first with defending champion Duffy Waldorf and Marco Dawson after an opening-round 64 at the Jack Nicklaus-designed course located adjacent to the Four Seasons Resort on the Big Island of Hawaii.

    Couples birdied four of the first five holes en route to a 7-under 65 to come in at 130 after 36 holes. Kirk Triplett shot an 8-under 64 to sit alone in third at 131.

    Nine of the 47 golfers who teed it up in the first event of the PGA Tour Champions season were within four shots of the lead entering Saturday's final round. Conditions were ideal the first two days as 41 golfers were under par.

    Couples, who missed most of last year with wrist and back injuries, showed few signs of rust after carding 16 birdies against two bogeys but couldn't shake Langer, who has won this event twice. Langer was named the tour's player of the year with four wins and four runner-up finishes. He stayed close to Couples for most of the round thanks to four birdies on the front nine and had four more birdies against a lone bogey at the 12th on the back swing.

    Several times on the back nine Couples fought through a sore back, wincing on his drive at 18 and trying to do stretching exercises whenever he could.

    "It's barking," Couples said of his back after bogeying the last hole. "But I made it through the round."

    Champions tour rookie David Toms is in a group of four tied for fourth at 132 after he shot the best round of the day at 9-under 63. Joining him are Waldorf (68), Lee Janzen (66) and Olin Browne (67).

    Kaymer leads in Abu Dhabi

    New year, same old story for Martin Kaymer at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

    The two-time major winner from Germany set up another chance for a fourth victory at his regular year-opening tournament, shooting a second straight 6-under 66 to take a one-stroke lead after the second round.

    "My favorite golf course," Kaymer said after tapping in a birdie on the par-5 18th to nudge ahead of Rafa Cabrera Bello with a 12-under 132 total.

    Kaymer has averaged 68.73 in 38 rounds over the 7,583-yard National Course, a long track that suits his eye and his game. He feels extremely confident on the greens — he already has 14 birdies and an eagle this week — and the course's many doglegs is perfect for a player who fades the ball off the tee.

    "He's a dangerous player around here," said Henrik Stenson, who gave up his first-round lead to his Ryder Cup teammate. "I think it sets up beautifully for him. He's shown that in the past with three wins here."

    Those victories came in 2008, '10 and '11. The 53rd-ranked Kaymer should have had another in 2015, only to throw away a 10-shot lead with 13 holes to play and get reeled in by Gary Stal.

    Kaymer's round on Friday took off after rolling in a 20-foot eagle putt on No. 8, allowing him to rebound from a bogey on No. 6. He birdied six holes on the back nine as the wind died down, having been quite strong in the early afternoon.

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