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Chie Arimura shoots 6-under 66

SINGAPORE — Chie Arimura of Japan shot a 6-under 66 to widen her lead to two strokes over Karrie Webb in the second round of the HSBC Women’s Champions on Friday.

Arimura, ranked 19th in the world, made six birdies and an eagle and overcame bogeys on two of her first three holes to post a 10-under 134 total.

“I had a rough start but I controlled myself so it got better in the end,” said Arimura, who has never won outside of Japan. “Whenever I had doubt during today’s play, I reminded myself I should be confident.”

Webb also shot 66 with an eagle on the par-5 ninth.

“I putted really well today,” said Webb, ranked 13th. “It’s nice to see the putts go in and I’m playing solidly.”

Sun Young Yoo of South Korea was four shots back, while countrywoman Na Yeon Choi and England’s Karen Stupples were at 4 under, six shots behind Arimura.

American Cristie Kerr shot 67 to jump to 3 under for the tournament, and countrywoman Michelle Wie was 1 under after a 71.

World No. 1 Yani Tseng of Taiwan, who came to Singapore having won tournaments in each of the last three weeks, scored 72 to put her at 2 under.

“It was a bit of a tough day today, I just couldn’t hit a shot,” Tseng said. “My irons were terrible today. It’s a little frustrating, but eight behind is not so bad.”

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Tim Clark withdraws due to injury

MARANA, Ariz. – Tim Clark has withdrawn from the Match Play Championship because of an elbow injury and been replaced in the 64-man field by J.B. Holmes.

Because the brackets have been set, Holmes will take Clark’s position in the draw. He will face Camilo Villegas in the opening round.

Clark won The Players Championship a year ago and was the No. 22 seed. He has not played since he tied for second in the Sony Open at Honolulu last month.

Holmes has played the Accenture Match Play Championship only one time, losing to Tiger Woods on the 18th hole in the opening round.

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Giulia Sergas retains lead

CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand — Giulia Sergas of Italy shot a 3-under-par 69 to take a two-stroke lead after Friday’s second round of the New Zealand Women’s Open golf tournament. The 31-year-old, U.S.-based Sergas led by three shots after a first-round 64 and had a two-round total of 11-under 133. Kristie Smith of Australia was in second after a 64, posting nine birdies and a bogey in a round that lifted her nine places up the leaderboard. Linda Wessberg of Sweden shot the day’s best round, a 63, to sit in third place at 9-under 137, four shots behind Sergas. Smith was a late starter on the tournament’s first day and struggled to a 1-under 71 in strong winds. She made the best of an early tee time Friday, with her only mistake a three-putt at the par-3 15th. “That came out of the blue because I was playing well and had holed some great putts,” Smith said. “I didn’t really hit it close, but put it close with my wedges when I needed to and made the putts when I needed to.” Thirteen-year-old New Zealand amateur Lydia Ko was among a group of four players in fourth place at 6 under, along with British veteran and defending champion Laura Davies. Ko had a 68 Friday, and Davies shot a 66.

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Francesco Molinari decides to play

MARANA, Ariz. – Francesco Molinari of Italy says he will play in the Match Play Championship.

Molinari won the HSBC Champions last year and is No. 17 in the world ranking. He had planned to skip the World Golf Championship because his wife was expecting their first child. She gave birth to a boy Feb. 6, so Molinari says he’s going to Arizona.

The Italian announced the news on Twitter: “Decision made, leaving Sunday for Tucson. Looking forward to the Matchplay!”

He lost in the first round last year to Zach Johnson.

Molinari’s decision means all 64 players intend to play at Dove Mountain. The tournament begins Feb. 23.

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Rory McIlroy has lead; Tiger four back

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Tiger Woods surged into contention at the Dubai Desert Classic on Friday, shooting a bogey-free 6-under 66 in his bid to win his first tournament in more than a year.

With stellar putting and a consistent short game, Woods made six birdies for the day’s low score. He was at 7-under 137 after two rounds, four shots behind leader Rory McIlroy.

McIlroy followed his opening 65 with a 68 to maintain his lead going into the weekend at Emirates Golf Club. The 21-year-old golfer from Northern Ireland earned his only European Tour victory at this tournament two years ago.

A shot behind at 10 under were Sergio Garcia(67) and South Africa’s Thomas Aiken (67), followed by England’s Steve Webster (68) at 8 under.

Woods was tied for fifth with Jean Baptiste Gonnet of France, Anders Hansen of Denmark, Michael Hoey of Northern Ireland and Brett Rumford of Australia.

Woods, who has been outdriving his playing partners, No. 1-ranked Lee Westwood and No. 2 Martin Kaymer, added accuracy to his blistering drives and approach shots. And unlike Thursday when he missed several makeable putts and hit approach shots wide of the green, the winner of 14 majors routinely gave himself chances.

“It felt good today. I hit a lot of good shots,” said Woods, who likened his game on Friday to the way he played at last year’s Chevron World Challenge, where he lost in a playoff to U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell.

“I felt like I drove it pretty good and more than anything I controlled my traj [trajectory], which was nice,” he said. “I feel good. We worked out a few of the things last night that I didn’t like.”

McIlroy has struggled to meet expectations since winning the Quail Hollow Championship in 2009. He says he is approaching his game with more patience this season, and it seems to be paying dividends — he finished second in last month’s Abu Dhabi Championship.

McIlroy bogeyed the par-4 second hole, then settled himself with five birdies over his last 12 holes, including the 18th for the second straight day.

“I thought after the start that I had, I really hung in there and stayed patient and just sort of picked up my birdies when I could,” McIlroy said. “I think I was 5 under from 7 onwards. So, really pleased with the round, and sets me up for a good weekend.”

Much of the talk going into the tournament was on the powerhouse group of Woods, Westwood and Kaymer. But only Woods delivered on Friday, with Westwood (70) at 5-under 139 and Kaymer (71) at 4 under.

Westwood had four birdies but bogeyed two of his last four holes, missing two makeable putts. Kaymer, meanwhile, never seemed to get going, posting three birdies but also two bogeys in a row during his first six holes.

“I didn’t hit it so good. I didn’t give myself enough chances,” Westwood said. “It was just a plod round really, a bit of a boring day.”

Westwood, who last year struggled with a calf injury, said his distance has been suffering as has his control. It showed on approach shots that fell short, leaving him long putts on several holes that just missed.

“Distance control is poor when you are not striking it very well,” he said. “I’m just playing for the fat of the greens really and trying to make a few long ones which I haven’t, which is the reason I’m 5 under. Still in there with a chance.”

Aiken, ranked 97th and known as much for his shoulder-length hair as for his swing, has 67s in the first two rounds.

“Missed one green the whole day and I was on the fringe and I got to putt,” he said. “Just been putting the ball in the right positions, and these greens are so pure that you’re going to sink some putts.”

Garcia, once ranked No. 2 but now 79th, has shown the consistency this week that had been lacking last year. He has had two bogey-free rounds.

“I think that probably putting has been the thing I’m doing the best these past three weeks,” said Garcia, who had a top-10 finish in Qatar last week. “It’s nice to see my game, my long game catching up with that.”

There was more at stake this weekend than the tournament title.

Westwood could lose the top ranking if Kaymer wins and he finishes lower than second, and if Kaymer finishes second and Westwood is out of the top 10. If Kaymer is tied for second, he could still become No. 1 for the first time if Westwood finishes out of the top 36. Woods could move ahead of Kaymer if he wins and Kaymer finishes outside the top five.

Woods, who won this tournament in 2006 and 2008, said he could do even better going into a weekend where much stronger wind is forecast. Still, he said he relished his second round, calling his sixth hole emblematic of his day.

Woods drove the fairway on the 485-yard, par-4 hole and hit an 8-iron about 160 yards to a foot of the pin, where he made an easy birdie putt. Much as he did with a monster drive on 18 on Thursday that led to an eagle, the shot brought cheers from the crowd and a reminder of how good Woods can be when he gets his game on track.

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For infractions, fan input still welcome

RENO, Nev. — PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem would like to see more common sense used in enforcing penalties for rules infractions phoned in by alert fans watching on television but he said on Tuesday that halting their input completely is “not an option.”

“We like the fact that people call in. We like the fact people who watch the telecasts get excited about something they see,” Finchem said.

“We don’t want to turn those people off. We want to accept the information and deal with it. Cutting them off is not an option. It is just a question of how the rule is applied,” he said in an interview Tuesday during a stop at Montreux Golf & Country Club to promote the 13th Reno-Tahoe Open Aug. 4-7 on the edge of the Sierra Nevada.

Finchem said he discussed the controversial topic in a meeting with members of the USGA executive committee in Phoenix on Friday after television viewers called in violations byCamilo Villegas in Hawaii and Padraig Harrington in Abu Dhabi in recent weeks. Both initially were assessed two-shot penalties, but because officials were notified after the round, each was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard.

“They are taking a hard look at it,” Finchem said. “They understand our concerns. It is a complicated rule.”

The first question is whether it’s appropriate to disqualify a player for signing a scorecard “when you had no reason to know you were signing a bad card,” he said Tuesday.

Villegas reached over to tap down a divot as his ball was rolling back down a slope to that very spot. A TV viewer tried to reach tournament officials, but his e-mail didn’t make its way to Kapalua until after Villegas had signed for a 72.

Finchem also questioned whether a two-shot penalty is appropriate “when there is no way you reasonably could have known you made a penalty — even if you knew the rule, like in Harrington’s case.”

A TV viewer noticed that when replacing his ball on the green, the ball moved forward ever so slightly. Harrington later said he knew the ball nudged forward, but he felt it had rolled back to its original spot. He was disqualified the next day.

“In Harrington’s case, you could see the ball move a little bit in HD television. You couldn’t see it move in analog. And he didn’t know,” Finchem said. “So there needs to be fairness and common sense to the rule.”

Finchem said he wants the PGA Tour to follow the USGA’s lead and he anticipates they will end up with “a few, little, small” changes to the rules.

“I am cautiously optimistic we’ll get to some modifications that will just create a better system.”

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Four tied for Phoenix Open lead

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Bubba Watson started play with a ski cap and kept his hands warm between shots with mittens. Ben Crane wore two hats and three pair of pants. And Phil Mickelson played his final nine hole in short sleeves.

Short sleeves? In 45-degree conditions Thursday in the Phoenix Open?

“I don’t know how he was doing it because I didn’t think it was that warm out,” said playing partner Bill Haas, tied for the lead in the suspended first round at 6-under 65. “Better than it was in the morning, but it’s still pretty cold.”

Lefty thought nothing of it.

“I started to get a little bit warm,” Mickelson said. “It felt great.”

The start of play was delayed four hours because of heavy frost at TPC Scottsdale and only the scheduled morning starters completed the round.

The temperature dipped into the mid 20s overnight and it was 39 when play started at 11:40 a.m. The high was 47 on a cloudless day in the desert.

“It’s cold. You’ve got four layers on,” said Haas, tied with Jason Bohn, Tom Gillis and Champions Tour player Tom Lehman.

Another long frost delay was expected Friday, likely forcing most of the second round to Saturday and possibly setting up a 36-hole finish Sunday.

Lucas Glover, sporting a thick beard that prompted calls of “Grizzly” and “Brian Wilson” from fans, was a stroke back along with Chris Couch and Ben Crane.

“It was cold, and it’s getting colder,” Glover said.

Mickelson, coming off a one-stroke loss to Watson last week at Torrey Pines in San Diego, topped the group at 67. Watson shot a 70.

“I expected the golf course to be frozen and balls to be bouncing on the greens quite a ways.” Mickelson said. “It played terrific. The greens were receptive.”

Gillis said it seemed colder than it was over Christmas in Michigan when he played hockey on a lake in 15-degree conditions.

“I was wearing the same stuff and it felt a little colder today,” Gillis said. “Probably because we weren’t moving as much as we were when we were playing hockey. … But it just seemed colder than 15 degrees up there, that’s all I know.”

Lehman won the tournament in 2000 for the last of his five PGA Tour titles. The 51-year-old Minnesotan won the Senior PGA Championship last year and opened the season two weeks ago with a second-place finish in the Champions Tour event at Hualalai.

“It was chilly, but once you get playing, you kind of forget about it,” Lehman said. “Somebody mentioned about playing in Minnesota where I grew up. There were some days there where it was so brutally cold that I can tell you, one time in high school, a kid broke his hand but didn’t know it until the ride home because his hands were numb all day. That’s cold. Today wasn’t there.”

Fellow Champions Tour player Mark Calcavecchia, a three-time winner at TPC Scottsdale, had a 77. Colombian star Camilo Villegas also struggled in the cold, shooting a 78 — the worst round of the day.

Defending champion Hunter Mahan was even par after five holes.

Geoff Ogilvy was 1 under through six holes in his first start since gouging his right index finger on a coral reef in Hawaii before the Tournament of Champions. He needed 12 stitches to repair the cut to the side of his knuckle.

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Tres Marias Championship postponed

The LPGA Tour, already facing a limited schedule, lost another tournament this year when it decided to postpone the Tres Marias Championship in Morelia, Mexico, over concerns of violence from drug wars.

The tournament had been scheduled to be played April 21-24. Ai Miyazato won last year.

“It won’t be held this year,” LPGA spokesman David Higdon said in an e-mail. “Our security firm determined the safety issues were too severe. We hope to return next year, though things will have to improve dramatically.”
Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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