Immelman pulls ahead at Masters with another 68
Trevor and Brandt are setting the pace at the Masters, so everyone expecting something more along the lines of, well, Tiger, let’s just say that’s not the name of the game so far.
But that guy named Phil is definitely in the mix after Friday’s second round.
Masters, Round 2
Photo Gallery
Masters, Round 2
Tiger Woods 2008 highlights
Photo Gallery
Tiger Woods 2008 highlights
Related Stories
- Â Â Â Immelman is showing them something at Masters
Trevor Immelman birdied the last two holes to put the finishing touches on a second consecutive four-under-par 68 and a one-shot lead at a much more workable Augusta National Golf Club. He’s at eight-under 136.
Next is Brandt Snedeker, who had more problems keeping his shaggy hair stuck under his visor than he had on the course after his own 68.
And right behind is none other than Phil Mickelson, whose bogey-free 68 puts him at five-under 139 and right in line to make a run at his third Masters title.
Mickelson, tied with Steve Flesch and Ian Poulter, was a quick starter, with birdies on two of his first three holes, and even managed to coax a birdie out of the tough 17th when he rolled in a 30-foot putt, but he had just one regret.
“I would love to be in the lead,” he said.
Tiger Woods would love to be somewhere in the top 10. He had to settle for a tie for 13th, at one-under 143, but he said that’s not necessarily a bad place, especially with an inventive par save at the 18th, where he closed out his round of one-under 71.
Woods, who birdied the 17th hole, hit his drive at the 18th far to the right under some trees. He had no chance to advance the ball the normal way, so he split the gap between two trees and landed the ball on the 10th fairway, which runs next to the 18th fairway. From there, he chipped the ball onto the green, clicked Stuart Appleby’s ball, and eventually made an eight-foot putt to save his par.
Woods, who is only two under on the par fives this week, hasn’t broken 70 at the Masters since the third round in 2005, but he chose to accentuate the positive aspects.
“I’m in good shape,” he said. “Obviously, I’m seven back, but on this golf course, you’ve got to stay patient. This golf course, you can make up shots, so just hang in there.”
Woods may have a little history on his side. The last player to come outside the top 10 to win after 36 holes was Jack Nicklaus in 1986. Nicklaus had been tied for 17th. The most Woods has come from behind to win the Masters after 36 holes was six shots in 2005.
As for Immelman, he feels lucky to be here, but then, he feels fortunate to be anywhere after two upsetting health scares last year. The South African lost 20 pounds after the 2007 Masters because of a stomach parasite, and then later in the year, he had a benign tumor removed from his diaphragm.
“Obviously, this year is pretty special,” Immelman said. “Last year, guys go through that . . . bad timing. To shoot two 68s in the first two days is probably beyond my expectations, so I’m pretty thrilled right now.”
Immelman won the Nedbank Challenge last year, but he is still on the mend from his health scare and has missed four cuts in eight PGA Tour events in 2008. He said he has gained perspective from his experiences.
“I went from winning a tournament to lying in a hospital bed waiting for results on a tumor,” he said. “So it definitely made me realize that golf wasn’t my whole life.”
Snedeker finished the same way as Immelman with back-to-back birdies, the only blemish on his round a three-putt bogey at the par-three 16th.
Snedeker chipped in to birdie the sixth and called it one of the luckiest shots he has ever hit. Chances are, Snedeker could use a little more good fortune the rest of the way.
“If I had told you at the beginning of the week that I thought I was going to be in second place, you probably would have thought I was crazy, and I probably would have thought you were right,” he said.
Snedeker is two shots ahead of fashion plate Poulter, Mickelson and another lefty, Flesch, who has jumped out from behind the Georgia pines and into contention after missing four cuts in nine tournaments this year.




This is default description text on Padangan Themes, of course you can change this text via you profile administration.