Former world No. 1 struggles to make cut at PGA Championship
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The narrow fairways and thick rough at TPC Harding Park have given players plenty of trouble through the first two rounds of the PGA Championship, but it was the course’s unexpectedly slow greens that nearly cut Tiger Woods tournament short.
The greens are relatively flat, but the combination of second-round hole positions that favoured their edges, and cool coastal fog that slowed them down as the day wore on, bewildered even the 15-time major champion.
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“As the day wore on, they got a little more fuzzy and got even slower, and I struggled even a little bit more hitting the putts hard enough,” he said.
“That’s always the toughest combination ... making that adjustment. You give it a run, but it just — it’s just not rolling out.”
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But Woods said he was pleased with his improved accuracy off the tee on Friday, a key component to success at the lengthy municipal course, which sits on the shores of San Francisco’s Lake Merced.
“I drove it great today. That’s one of the things I wanted to clean up from yesterday. I didn’t do as good a job yesterday of driving the ball as I needed to. Today was different.”
If he can put it all together, Woods might still have a shot at winning his 16th major title and record-breaking 83rd PGA Tour victory on Sunday.
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