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Tiger pulls away from pack at Doral

Woods takes 2-shot lead heading into final round of Ford; Mickelson 4 back

Woods stares after finding water on 9th hole during third round at Doral championship golf tournament in Florida
Defending Ford Championship winner Tiger Woods, left, survived a double bogey early in his third round to shoot a 4-under 68 and take a two-shot lead. Rival Phil Mickelson fell four shots back with a 72.
Marc Serota / Reuters
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updated 10:08 p.m. ET March 4, 2006

MIAMI - The shots were flying all over the 18th hole at the Blue Monster, behind banyan trees and corporate chalets, in the water on the left and the opposite fairway on the right.

One guy made a 65-foot putt for birdie. Another one missed a 3-foot putt to take double bogey.

What was billed as a showdown between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson turned into a circus Saturday afternoon until Woods restored order with a simple par.

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Carving a 6-iron out of the trees to steer clear of all the trouble around him, Woods escaped with a 4-under 68 to build a two-shot lead over Daniel Chopra and Rich Beem in the Ford Championship at Doral.

“I’m in good shape, I guess,” Woods said after an exhausting day in which he got his mistakes out of the way early, recovering from a double bogey at No. 9 with three straight birdies on the back nine to emerge from the pack.

Woods had to wait 25 minutes on the 18th tee while Camilo Villegas studied his options, long enough to order pizza.

“Probably would have got it when we were on the fairway,” Woods said.

He would have had to pay for it, because Mickelson was already out $200 after giving a man money for breaking his watch with an errant 3-wood into the gallery at No. 10.

Indeed, there was no shortage of entertainment for a record crowd of 37,000:

  • Villegas was one shot out of the lead, saw Woods atop the leaderboard, and hit his tee shot squarely behind a banyan tree. He played sideways to the first fairway, had the gallery moved out of harm’s way, took a drop away from the chalets, then deposited a majestic 8-iron over everything to 30 feet.

And then he three-putted for double bogey and a 71 to fall three shots behind.

“Unfortunately, I just missed a short one there to go home,” he said.

  • Chopra was lost in the trees and hoping to make par when he grabbed a 5-iron and looked for a way out. He went under one tree, over another, left of a third three and right of a fourth tree, barely on the green. Then he made birdie with a 65-foot putt for 68.

“The ideal finish,” he said.

  • Mickelson was tied for the lead after nine holes when Woods made his double bogey, and thought everything was falling his way when he overcooked his 3-wood into the gallery and it took a fortuitous hop toward the green. Then he found the man he hit, and noticed his watch was broken. Lefty pulled two $100 bills from his bag to pay for it.

“It wasn’t a Rolex,” Mickelson said.

It wasn’t his day, either. He hit a pedestrian pitch and two-putted for par, then slowly lost ground. He finished by hitting a 4-iron off barren land and onto the green, with enough spin to send it down the slope, off the green and into the water.

“An interesting day,” Mickelson said. “Obviously, it wasn’t what I hoped. But the great thing about today was it was not the last day. There’s one more day tomorrow.”

As for that pairing with Woods?

“Because it was not the final round, I wasn’t really concerned,” Mickelson said after his 72. “I should be now. I’m four back, and I’ve got to make a run tomorrow.”


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