Tiger with big lead, rookie at his side at Torrey Pines
Fueling their frustration is that Jose Maria Olazabal won the Buick Invitational in 2002 after making the cut on the number. But that year, Olazabal was only eight shots behind the co-leaders, J.L. Lewis and Kent Jones.
The 19 players who made the cut and can't play the weekend were 13 shots behind Woods, who is turning this Pacific property into his personal playground.
Under sunny skies and a stiff breeze, Woods got his round going with a par. He drove it well to the right, then bladed his iron so far over the green that he was happy that his third shot stayed atop a ridge in the rough. That left him 25 feet for par, and he chipped that in. He holed a 10-foot birdie putt on the next, then made three straight birdies around the turn to seize control.
Along with chasing Woods, the biggest frustration might be weather.
The forecast was for rain to arrive Saturday afternoon, with heavy rain expected on Sunday. That leaves a dual challenge of trying to catch golf's best player and cope with potentially miserable conditions.
"Chasing Tiger Woods is always the tallest task on the PGA Tour, so I get a chance to try again," Cink said.
For Streelman, it's a new experience, and one he is relishing for all the right reasons.
Whereas Woods never had to go to any stage of Q-school to earn his card, Streelman has been toiling on the mini-tours since leaving college. When he learned he was in the field, he had enough time to call his fiancee in Phoenix and his sponsors in Southern California, and they rushed to Torrey Pines to watch him play.
"It's going to be, for me, very gratifying, and a tremendous learning experience," he said. "To be able to walk next to him, to just kind of see what he does and try and compare ... obviously, if I can keep doing what I'm doing, just play the golf course, that's all it is."
Woods is 30-6 when having at least a share of the 36-hole lead on the PGA Tour, but one reason that Woods closes so well is that he never takes any lead for granted -- no matter who is trying to catch him.
And the more he learned about Streelman, the more he liked his story.
"People don't realize the difference between someone making cuts, getting on the tour, and winning a golf tournament," he said. "It's just a couple of good shots here and there, maybe a couple of lucky breaks here and there. It really isn't as big a gap as people might think. The great thing is watching guys taking advantage of opportunities, whether they're first alternate or they get an exemption.
"Those are fun stories to see transpire."
Divots
- Phil Mickelson shot a 73 on the South and was at 1-under 143, 12 shots out of the lead. "I'm not sharp right now," he said.
- Any meeting of Woods and Rory Sabbatini will have to wait. Sabbatini shot a 75 and was 10 shots behind.
- John Daly missed the cut after a 76 on the North Course and headed straight for the parking lot.



