HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) -- Jim Furyk added his own touch to Harbour Town's famous 18th hole Friday, rolling in a 56-foot birdie putt for a two-shot lead in the Verizon Heritage hours after Aaron Baddeley's unlikely eagle there.
Putting from the back fringe, Furyk had simply hoped for a good lag and an easy par on the final hole. Instead, he watched his ball strike the flagstick and fall in. His 4-under 67 left him at 11 under, two strokes in front of Baddeley (67), Brian Gay (67), Duffy Waldorf (68) and first-round leader Vaughn Taylor (70).
Furyk's long birdie also added to the Friday fireworks near the lighthouse hole.
Baddeley capped a late charge -- he had three birdies and the eagle in his final five holes -- at the magnificent seaside hole featuring Sea Pines' red-and-white striped lighthouse as a backdrop.
Baddeley struck a smooth 8-iron about 160 yards that hit the green and bounced into the cup. The 25-year-old Australian heard the crowd's cheers and wondered how close he'd gotten.
"When I got up there, the ball wasn't anywhere to be seen," Baddeley said.
The hole, crafted by architect Pete Dye along Calibogue Sound, has seen its share of amazing shots. Three years ago, Davis Love III chipped in a tying birdie on the 72nd hole, then struck the flag stick for a tap-in birdie during the playoff for his fifth Harbour Town title.
Tournament officials said Baddeley's was the third eagle there since 1983. Lee Janzen accomplished it during the final round in 1997, then Mike Hulbert matched it in his second round two years later.
Furyk and Baddeley had similar second rounds -- strong play early, bad mistakes in the middle and surges at the end.
For Furyk he had birdies on four of his first seven holes to take the lead. However, bogeys on the eight and ninth holes backed him into a tie with Baddeley.
"I wanted to hit good shots and put the ball on the green and stop the bleeding at that point," Furyk said.
That's what he did, moving in front again with a birdie on the 15th hole. After getting fooled by the wind on his last hole, Furyk said he "got a little extra bonus" with the long birdie.
Furyk has not won since last year's Western Open. However, he tied for third in The Players Championship last month and likes the way he's playing.
"I got in a little bit of a tough jam," he said. "But it was nice to fight through it and keep it going."
Baddeley moved within a shot of the lead with two birdies on his first five holes. He found problems on the par-4 eighth, knocking an approach out of bounds for a 7. A series of pars settled his nerves until his five-hole flourish at the end -- Baddeley closed 2-4-3-3-2 on the scorecard.
Baddeley said despite the triple bogey, "I was still only four off the lead. So I thought if you make a few coming in, you're going to be right there for the weekend."
Baddeley, 158th on the money list coming in, is certainly in contention for his first PGA Tour title.
Jeff Maggert tied the mark for lowest back-nine score at 29. It was first accomplished by Brad Faxon in 1997 and tied by Chris Perry in 2000 and Steve Flesch in 2001. Maggert finished with a 66 to reach 7 under, three shots behind the leaders.
Ernie Els was the only one of golf's "Big Five" of Masters champ Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh and Retief Goosen to play here after the year's opening major. Els shot a 67 and was seven shots behind Furyk.
Divots: It was bound to happen. After hitting all 14 fairways in Thursday's first round, John Daly missed the first one he played Friday. Daly entered the week 181st in driving accuracy. Still, Daly shot a 67 and was at 5 under. ... Masters runner-up Tim Clark had the best second-round score, a 65 . He was six shots off the lead at 5 under. ... A year after tying for second, Darren Clarke missed the cut at 4-over 146. ... Jay Haas finished at 5-over 147 and missed the cut at Harbour Town for just the seventh time in a record 30 starts. Jay's son, Bill, made the cut at Harbour Town in his second try.
Putting from the back fringe, Furyk had simply hoped for a good lag and an easy par on the final hole. Instead, he watched his ball strike the flagstick and fall in. His 4-under 67 left him at 11 under, two strokes in front of Baddeley (67), Brian Gay (67), Duffy Waldorf (68) and first-round leader Vaughn Taylor (70).
Furyk's long birdie also added to the Friday fireworks near the lighthouse hole.
Baddeley capped a late charge -- he had three birdies and the eagle in his final five holes -- at the magnificent seaside hole featuring Sea Pines' red-and-white striped lighthouse as a backdrop.
Baddeley struck a smooth 8-iron about 160 yards that hit the green and bounced into the cup. The 25-year-old Australian heard the crowd's cheers and wondered how close he'd gotten.
"When I got up there, the ball wasn't anywhere to be seen," Baddeley said.
The hole, crafted by architect Pete Dye along Calibogue Sound, has seen its share of amazing shots. Three years ago, Davis Love III chipped in a tying birdie on the 72nd hole, then struck the flag stick for a tap-in birdie during the playoff for his fifth Harbour Town title.
Tournament officials said Baddeley's was the third eagle there since 1983. Lee Janzen accomplished it during the final round in 1997, then Mike Hulbert matched it in his second round two years later.
Furyk and Baddeley had similar second rounds -- strong play early, bad mistakes in the middle and surges at the end.
For Furyk he had birdies on four of his first seven holes to take the lead. However, bogeys on the eight and ninth holes backed him into a tie with Baddeley.
"I wanted to hit good shots and put the ball on the green and stop the bleeding at that point," Furyk said.
That's what he did, moving in front again with a birdie on the 15th hole. After getting fooled by the wind on his last hole, Furyk said he "got a little extra bonus" with the long birdie.
Furyk has not won since last year's Western Open. However, he tied for third in The Players Championship last month and likes the way he's playing.
"I got in a little bit of a tough jam," he said. "But it was nice to fight through it and keep it going."
Baddeley moved within a shot of the lead with two birdies on his first five holes. He found problems on the par-4 eighth, knocking an approach out of bounds for a 7. A series of pars settled his nerves until his five-hole flourish at the end -- Baddeley closed 2-4-3-3-2 on the scorecard.
Baddeley said despite the triple bogey, "I was still only four off the lead. So I thought if you make a few coming in, you're going to be right there for the weekend."
Baddeley, 158th on the money list coming in, is certainly in contention for his first PGA Tour title.
Jeff Maggert tied the mark for lowest back-nine score at 29. It was first accomplished by Brad Faxon in 1997 and tied by Chris Perry in 2000 and Steve Flesch in 2001. Maggert finished with a 66 to reach 7 under, three shots behind the leaders.
Ernie Els was the only one of golf's "Big Five" of Masters champ Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh and Retief Goosen to play here after the year's opening major. Els shot a 67 and was seven shots behind Furyk.
Divots: It was bound to happen. After hitting all 14 fairways in Thursday's first round, John Daly missed the first one he played Friday. Daly entered the week 181st in driving accuracy. Still, Daly shot a 67 and was at 5 under. ... Masters runner-up Tim Clark had the best second-round score, a 65 . He was six shots off the lead at 5 under. ... A year after tying for second, Darren Clarke missed the cut at 4-over 146. ... Jay Haas finished at 5-over 147 and missed the cut at Harbour Town for just the seventh time in a record 30 starts. Jay's son, Bill, made the cut at Harbour Town in his second try.
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