Daily Wrap-up: Round 2, The Barclays

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Aug. 26, 2011
By Staff and wire reports

EDISON, N.J. (AP) -- What once looked to be a long week at The Barclays suddenly has turned into a sprint.

Matt Kuchar heard the news from his walking scorer when he reached the eighth green Friday that the PGA TOUR's opening Playoffs event would be reduced to 54 holes on Saturday because of Hurricane Irene. By then, the defending champion had already left his mark on Plainfield Country Club and closed with a pair of pars for a 6-under 65.

That gave Kuchar a one-shot lead over Dustin Johnson and Vijay Singh, and it could loom large.

Even now, no one is sure what to expect from Irene. The plan is to start the third and final round Saturday morning and hope to finish before the rain arrives. If not, it will revert to a 36-hole tournament.

"The best players generally come out winners after 72, so for me, I feel like the more golf we play, the better my chances," Kuchar said. "But given the situation, I love being on top of the leaderboard with 18 holes to go. Hard to find something to complain about with the situation I'm in. Yeah, I'm quite happy that I've got this opportunity. I just feel like we've got one last round to go."

It's the first time a FedExCup Playoffs event has been reduced to 54 holes since the series began in 2007, and there was not much choice.

Plainfield already had received about 10 inches of rain the past two weeks and 10 more were expected Sunday. There also were safety issues. Crews began dismantling electronic scoreboards Friday afternoon and an army of volunteers from the area had to make their own plans to evacuate, if necessary.

"It kind of makes you want to cry because of all the effort that went in, and all of the energy that surrounded this event going into the week, which is going to be the best Barclays we have ever had," tournament director Peter Mele said.

The tournament had been a sellout, and fans still turned out Friday in warm weather. They were treated to quite a show.

Kuchar, who won The Barclays last year at Ridgewood, played without a bogey in a round so efficient that his most memorable shot was punching under a tree and onto the green for a two-putt par on the eighth.

He finished his first round earlier Friday with a birdie on the 18th for a 63, and he was at 14-under 128 going into the final round.

On the other side of the course was Johnson, using his sheer power to overwhelm a soft course. Johnson was blasting driver whenever he thought he could carry the trouble off the tee. He came up just short of the par-4 fourth and ninth greens, making birdie on both as he went out in 29. Johnson made an 18-foot birdie on the 11th to tie for the lead, but his 3-iron into the par-5 12th turned just enough to catch the water, and he had to scramble for par.

It was a spectacular round in many ways, no matter how soft the conditions. Over the final three holes, Johnson missed birdie putts inside 10 feet and still shot 63.

FedExCup_150.jpg
Projected points
The 2011 PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup are under way. To see the movement in the standings at The Barclays, click here.

"There's no way I can say I'm disappointed by any means," he said. "I could have done a little better with the short game. But overall, I mean a 63 is a 63. I'm going to be smiling." And, yes, he said that with a smile.

Singh had only one blemish in his round of 64 that featured eight birdies.

Among those at 10 under were Justin Rose (65), Aaron Baddeley (66) and a surprise -- at least this year -- in Padraig Harrington. The three-time major champion only got into the FedExCup Playoffs last week at No. 124 of the 125 who qualified. He opened with a 65 for his low round of the year, and followed it with seven birdies in his round of 67.

He played with William McGirt, the No. 125 seed, who had a 69 and was another shot behind. They now only have one more round to secure a spot among the top 100 in the standings and move on to the second playoff event outside Boston next week.

"I wouldn't say we played with desperation," Harrington said. "I think there was a bit of freedom in it. We had nothing to lose. We were the last men in."

McGirt was planning to play Nationwide Tour events in Tennessee and Idaho. Instead, he went to Plainfield and appears headed to the TPC Boston, two tournaments with $8 million in prize money.

"Kind of got everything going, but hey, it's golf," McGirt said. "And the worst thing I could finish this week is 125."

PGA TOUR events are not official unless they go at least 54 holes. If the rain arrives earlier than expected Saturday and the tournament reverts to 36-hole scores, the TOUR will still distribute FedExCup points as if it were official, which is significant for those trying to get into the top 100.

Adam Scott won a playoff at Riviera six years ago after rain allowed just 36 holes, and while he received official money, it didn't count as a PGA TOUR win and he only received 75 percent of the world ranking points available that week.

None of the players seemed to mind that it would be 54 holes, even as a playoff event. One look at the forecast, and news of a hurricane warning for New Jersey, was enough to make anyone realize golf is secondary.

"I think they made the right decision," Harrington said. "There's bigger things going on, once this hurricane hits, to be worried about coming back for the last round of a golf event. There's going to be bigger issues."

This is the second straight year a hurricane has been the focus at a playoff event. Hurricane Earl threatened the Deutsche Bank Championship outside Boston last season, although it never developed.

"I think you never know with hurricanes. They are fickle, as we all know," Mele said. "Unfortunately, this one wasn't."

Plainfield: Friday
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 5th hole was the easiest with a Friday scoring average of 4.462.
EAGLES: 3 BIRDIES: 68 PARS: 40 BOGEYS: 6 OTHER: 2
The par-4 13th hole was the toughest with a Friday scoring average of 4.092.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 11 PARS: 87
BOGEYS: 20 OTHERS: 1
About the leader: Matt Kuchar
• Matt Kuchar, who won The Barclays on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff last year and nearly went on to win the FedExCup (finished No. 2), hung on to the lead for the second-consecutive day with a 6-under 65, moving to 14-under 128 and a one-stroke lead over Dustin Johnson and Vijay Singh.
• While Bob Gilder owns the 36-hole record at The Barclays with an opening 36-hole score of 127 in 1982, Kuchar's 128 total at Plainfield Country Club is the best in tournament history on a par-71 course. The previous best score on a par-71 layout was 130, set by K.J. Choi at Westchester Country Club in 2007.
• Only David Toms (124 at the Crowne Plaza Invitational) and Patrick Cantlay (127 at the Travelers Championship) have posted lower opening 36-hole scores on TOUR this season.
• Kuchar has held/shared the second-round lead of a PGA TOUR event three previous times in his career, with no wins coming in those events. He eventually finished second at the 2008 Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, T10 at the 2010 PGA Championship and T3 at the 2010 BMW Championship.
• Saturday will mark the second time Kuchar has carried the lead into the final round of a TOUR event. He won the 2009 Turning Stone Resort Championship after sharing the third-round lead with Scott Piercy and then outlasted Vaughn Taylor in a six-hole playoff.
• Kuchar is hoping to join Ernie Els (1996-97) as the only repeat winners of The Barclays, although he would do so on a different course than his first win (Ridgewood Country Club). In fact, of Kuchar's three career PGA TOUR wins, he has never had a chance to defend a title on the same course. He won the 2002 Honda Classic in the tournament's last appearance at TPC Heron Bay. He won the 2009 Turning Stone Resort Championship, which qualified him for the 2010 World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational the following year, played the same week as he would have been defending his title.
• Kuchar is seeking to become the first player to successfully defend a title on a different course than he won the previous season since Padraig Harrington at the 2007 and 2008 British Open, won at Carnoustie and Royal Birkdale, respectively. The last player to perform the feat in a non-Major Championship was Jim Furyk at the 2006 and 2007 RBC Canadian Open, won at Hamilton G&CC and Angus Glen GC, respectively.
• Kuchar is making his eighth start at The Barclays, with his win in 2010 his lone top-25 finish among four previous made cuts. He now owns six consecutive rounds in the 60s at the event, with rounds of 68-69-69-66 a year ago.
• Kuchar continues to be one of the most consistent players on TOUR with eight top 10s in 2011, including a runner-up at the Memorial. In 2010 and 2011 combined, he has 19 top 10s, the most on TOUR over that time.
• At No. 12 in the standings, Kuchar is the highest-ranked player in the FedExCup standings without a win in 2011.
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