HOFFMAN LEADS FOR FIRST TIME
FROM CBS SPORTS.COM
ORLANDO, Florida -- Equipped with his first US PGA Tour lead in 67
starts, Morgan Hoffmann played on Friday like he wanted to keep it in
the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Hoffman made
birdies on half of his holes for a 7-under 65, giving him a
three-shot lead over Henrik Stenson, Harris English and defending
champion Matt Every going into the weekend on soft and defenseless Bay
Hill.
Stenson, English and Every each had a 66.
Rory McIlroy also got into the mix -- finally -- by making five
straight birdies on his back nine for a 66, his first sub-70 score
in three PGA Tour events this year.
He is five shots behind and
headed in the right direction in his final start before the
Masters.
Bay Hill has greens that are so stressed
that they will be replaced this summer. They are slow and
receptive, a recipe for low scoring, and it shows.
Hoffmann is at 13-under 131, one short of the 36-hole record at
Bay Hill. The cut was at 142, matching the lowest score to make
the cut in 27 years at Bay Hill. It was the first time the cut was
under par, but only because the tournament changed par to 70
(instead of 72) in 2008.
''I'm trying to birdie
every hole out there, so it was good,'' Hoffmann said. ''Just
hitting great putts and good shots into the greens really helps.
It's nice to hit some greens for a change. This year hasn't been
that great, and it's a good change.''
The
25-year-old from Oklahoma State made six birdies on the front nine,
including four in a row, and he finished with a 6-iron out of the
rough and over the water -- the ball landed just four paces onto
the green -- for a par that kept him in control.
Hoffmann came into the week at No. 158 in the ''strokes gained''
statistic from tee-to-green. He leads the field at Bay Hill.
Next up is how well he holds up under pressure on the weekend.
Stenson, who has finished fourth in his two Florida events
already, birdied his last four holes for a 30 on the back nine. He
will be playing in the penultimate group with English, who is No.
52 in the world just outside qualifying for the Masters.
''Got to keep the pedal down and keep aggressive,'' English said.
He is coming off a top 10 at Innisbrook in which he closed with a
65, which moved him up eight spots in the ranking.
McIlroy had dinner with Palmer on Thursday night and was treading
water Friday morning until an 18-foot birdie putt on the par-3
second hold got him going. He birdied the next four holes, though
he lost some momentum at the end with a bogey on No. 8 and a
scrambling par on his final hole.
''It would be nice
to finish the round off a little better, but still a good score
and sets me up well for the weekend,'' McIlroy said.
''I think
each and every day I'm feeling a little more comfortable,
especially on the greens. Obviously, we played in the morning so we got
the best of the greens, and it's easier to trust the lines you
pick for yourself. But happy with how I putted today, and putt
like that over the weekend, I'll have a chance.''
A lot of that depends on Hoffmann, who is coming off a pair of
12-hour range sessions this weekend to try to rely on a slight
fade.
Every has only one top 10 since he won at Bay
Hill a year ago, and he has not finished in the top 25 in his last
17 tournaments.
But he is confident he is headed in the right
direction with his swing, and it showed for two days. He ran off
four straight birdies at the end of his round for a 66 and was at
134.
''I'm really excited to play golf because I
know I have good stuff coming really, really soon,'' Every said.
''And I said before, you can lie to yourself. I've done it before
all the time where I think I can win at the start of weeks. It's
like probably how Rory feels every week.''
McIlroy, playing in Palmer's tournament for the first time, had dinner
with the King on Thursday night after his opening round (and a drug
test). They chatted more about commercial possibilities and
old-time golf stories than McIlroy's bid to win the Masters and complete the career Grand Slam.
Palmer also insisted the 25-year-old McIlroy have a banana split.
''I'll be going to the gym this afternoon,'' McIlroy said. ''It
was fantastic, it really was. He's telling stories of the old days
and talking about a few of the things he's done more from a
commercial standpoint, the drink and golf courses and all this
sort of stuff - stuff that I could potentially be getting into in
the future.''
He said Palmer also told him how close he was to his father.
''It was just great to be in his presence, and great to be in his
company, and I had a good time,'' McIlroy said.
Divots
Sam Saunders, the 27-year-old grandson of Palmer, made four
birdies on the back nine to make the cut by two shots. ... With a
breeze at his back, Gary Woodland hit a 358-yard drive on the
par-4 fifth hole to short of the green, 50 feet from the hole. He
still made par. ... Adam Scott had a 73 and is nine shots behind.
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