Snedeker played bogey-free at tough Spyglass Hill on Friday for a 4-under 68, giving him a share of the lead with Ted Potter Jr. in the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Potter three-putted his final hole at Monterey Peninsula for a 67.
Hunter Mahan was among those one shot behind. With one more round before everyone has played all three courses in the rotation, the leaderboard was a big traffic jam. Three dozen players were within five shots of the lead.
Snedeker, who was at 8-under 134, felt he was at an advantage because he goes to Pebble Beach for the final two rounds.
And there’s one other edge for his psyche — Tiger Woods isn’t playing, and defending champion Phil Mickelson is six shots behind.
Snedeker has played so well this year that he is leading the FedEx Cup standings without having won. He was runner-up the last two weeks — four shots behind Woods at Torrey Pines, and then four shots behind Mickelson in the Phoenix Open.
“Keep running into guys who are or who are going to be in the Hall of Fame,” Snedeker said at the start of the week.
Mickelson, going after a record-tying fifth win in the event, was easing his way into contention until he made three bogeys in a four-hole stretch along the ocean at Spyglass Hill for a 71.
Snedeker made it look easy at Spyglass, even though the day began in rugged conditions with a light rain and temperatures in the low 40s. He hit a towering 8-iron on the downhill, par-3 12th hole that plopped 3 feet next to the cup for his first birdie. He added a pair of simple up-and-down birdies on the par 5s and then closed out a solid day with an 8-iron to 5 feet on the eighth hole.
Snedeker sees the upside of his two second-place finishes: At least he’s giving himself a chance.
“That’s how you win out here,” he said. “You keep putting yourself in position, and the more times you do, the more success you’re going to have. ... I’m doing a better job this week of making my way around the golf courses and not putting myself in bad spots and getting out of tough situations very quickly.”
His goal for the last two days?
“Not do anything stupid,” he said. “Unfortunately, I don’t do it very often.”
Potter remains somewhat of a mystery. He won last year in his rookie season at The Greenbrier Classic to claim a peculiar footnote in history — the only player to win a PGA Tour event in which Woods and Mickelson missed the cut.
Still, his performance has been spotty. Potter missed nine out of the 12 cuts going into The Greenbrier, and then missed four out of nine cuts after his win.
“It’s just a funny game like that,” Potter said. “Some weeks you play really well and you get the right kicks and everything goes well. And then there are weeks you can still hit the ball well and get the bad kicks.”
It’s been good so far on the Monterey Peninsula, which has been graced with surprisingly good weather. Even though the cold rain finally arrived, it didn’t last long. The sun broke through about three hours into the round, and by late afternoon, the Pacific was gleaming.
Fredrik Jacobson had the low round of the day, a 66 at Pebble Beach that put him in the group at 7 under with Mahan, John Merrick and Patrick Reed.
Saturday’s forecast is for more sunshine, giving those in the Northeast who are snowed in some pretty pictures on television. Snedeker is part of the celebrity rotation, meaning he will join the circus — Bill Murray, Ray Romano and the rest of their Hollywood crew, along with star power from other sports such as Tony Romo, Matt Cain and even San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh.
Five days after a Super Bowl loss, Harbaugh had reason to smile. He was leading the pro-am portion of the tournament. Harbaugh is playing with Jason Day of Australia, who made a late string of birdies for a 68 at Spyglass Hill and was two shots behind.
Mahan lost a stroke on the spongy greens. He went to knock in a short bogey putt on the par-3 seventh hole when the ball moved on him.
“It just rolled over in like a heel print or something,” Mahan said. “I didn’t feel like I moved it. I didn’t feel like I had anything much to do with it moving. It’s just a rub of the green, so had to go back and take a penalty. That was frustrating, because I was hitting it so good.”
Mickelson was equally frustrated by throwing away some careless shots. While he was tied for 39th, Mickelson didn’t feel out of contention.
“I love Pebble Beach. I’ve played well there and I’m only one good round away,” he said. “If I can shoot something in the mid-60s, I’ll be right there for Sunday’s round, which is what I care about.”
Mickelson was six shots behind going into the final round last year when he won. That was against Charlie Wi, still searching for his first tour win. At the top now is Snedeker, the second-highest ranked American behind Woods who is averaging 66.5 in his last eight rounds.
DIVOTS: Geoff Ogilvy’s hopes of qualifying for the Match Play Championship took a big hit when he twice missed par putts inside 2½ feet and three-putted for par from 25 feet on the sixth hole at Pebble. He had a 74 and was tied for 108th. He likely needs to finish fifth to move into the top 64. ... Lee Westwood, in his Pebble Beach National Pro-Am debut playing with his father, had a 70 at Monterey Peninsula and was four shots behind.
Pebble Beach SCORES
Second Round
Ted Potter Jr. 67p-67m—134
Brandt Snedeker 66m-68s—134
Fredrik Jacobson 71s-66p—137
John Merrick 68p-67m—135
Hunter Mahan 66p-69m—135
Patrick Reed 68s-69p—137
Patrick Cantlay 66m-70s—136
Nick O’Hern 70p-66m—136
James Hahn 71p-65m—136
Jason Day 68m-68s—136
Russell Knox 64m-73s—137
Chris Kirk 71s-68p—139
Justin Hicks 71s-68p—139
Retief Goosen 71s-68p—139
Sean O’Hair 70p-67m—137
Matt Every 67p-70m—137
Pat Perez 69m-69s—138
Ryuji Imada 65m-73s—138
Kevin Streelman 69p-69m—138
Aaron Baddeley 69s-71p—140
Kevin Sutherland 70p-68m—138
Alistair Presnell 68s-72p—140
Luke Guthrie 68p-70m—138
Bob Estes 69s-71p—140
Kevin Stadler 69p-69m—138
Lee Westwood 68p-70m—138
Kevin Na 68s-72p—140
Brendon de Jonge 67m-71s—138
Seung-Yul Noh 67s-73p—140
Matt Jones 69s-72p—141
James Driscoll 72m-67s—139
Tommy Gainey 71s-70p—141
Jimmy Walker 68m-71s—139
Billy Horschel 70s-71p—141
Jim Herman 71s-70p—141
Richard H. Lee 68m-71s—139
Bill Lunde 71s-70p—141
William McGirt 72s-69p—141
Scott Brown 72p-68m—140
Joe Durant 71p-69m—140
Heath Slocum 69p-71m—140
Mike Weir 75p-65m—140
Greg Owen 65m-75s—140
Scott Gardiner 73s-69p—142
Kelly Kraft 69m-71s—140
Jordan Spieth 70m-70s—140
Cameron Tringale 71s-71p—142
J.B. Holmes 72s-70p—142
Charlie Wi 70m-70s—140
Phil Mickelson 69m-71s—140
Robert Garrigus 71m-69s—140
Jeff Maggert 67m-73s—140
Jeff Gove 69p-71m—140
Brendon Todd 68m-72s—140
Shawn Stefani 72p-68m—140
Ben Kohles 69p-72m—141
Padraig Harrington 72s-71p—143
Casey Wittenberg 70s-73p—143
Ken Duke 71s-72p—143
J.J. Henry 72s-71p—143
Tag Ridings 69m-72s—141
Rod Pampling 71m-70s—141
Tim Clark 76s-67p—143
Brian Harman 68m-73s—141
Brian Stuard 69p-72m—141
Stuart Appleby 70p-71m—141
Jason Gore 71s-72p—143
Troy Kelly 73p-68m—141
Jason Bohn 71p-70m—141
Lee Williams 66m-76s—142
Jim Furyk 75s-69p—144
Charlie Beljan 69s-75p—144
Camilo Villegas 67m-75s—142
Neal Lancaster 67m-75s—142
Dustin Johnson 73m-69s—142
Todd Hamilton 71s-73p—144
Scott Langley 65m-77s—142
Jason Kokrak 70p-72m—142
Doug LaBelle II 69s-75p—144
Chez Reavie 70p-72m—142
Woody Austin 75s-69p—144
Josh Teater 70m-72s—142
Brad Fritsch 69m-73s—142
Vaughn Taylor 70s-74p—144
Webb Simpson 71m-71s—142
Cameron Percy 74p-68m—142
Eric Meierdierks 68m-74s—142
Morgan Hoffmann 70p-72m—142
Nick Watney 68m-75s—143
Bryce Molder 71m-72s—143
John Mallinger 68m-75s—143
Dicky Pride 69p-74m—143
Erik Compton 71m-72s—143
Tim Petrovic 68m-75s—143
Henrik Norlander 71p-72m—143
Johnson Wagner 71s-75p—146
D.A. Points 68m-76s—144
Kevin Chappell 74p-70m—144
Steve Flesch 75p-69m—144
Cameron Beckman 70p-74m—144
Andres Romero 74p-70m—144
Donald Constable 74s-72p—146
Robert Karlsson 74p-70m—144
Fabian Gomez 73p-71m—144
Alexandre Rocha 72p-72m—144
Vijay Singh 72p-72m—144
Steven Bowditch 76p-68m—144
Ricky Barnes 71m-74s—145
Alex Cejka 70p-75m—145
Darron Stiles 72p-73m—145
Chris Stroud 78p-67m—145
Justin Bolli 70m-75s—145
Arjun Atwal 69p-76m—145
Sam Saunders 76s-71p—147
Andrew Svoboda 75m-70s—145
Derek Ernst 74s-73p—147
Ryan Palmer 72m-73s—145
Geoff Ogilvy 73s-74p—147
Scott McCarron 75s-72p—147
Si Woo Kim 75s-72p—147
Robert Streb 73s-74p—147
David Lingmerth 70m-75s—145
Steve LeBrun 74s-74p—148
Roberto Castro 71p-75m—146
Gary Christian 75p-71m—146
Bobby Gates 76s-72p—148
Jerry Kelly 73m-73s—146
Nathan Green 72s-76p—148
Lee Janzen 77s-71p—148
Peter Tomasulo 71m-75s—146
Nicholas Thompson 73s-76p—149
John Daly 77p-70m—147
Jin Park 73m-74s—147
Rory Sabbatini 74s-75p—149
Chris Riley 73m-74s—147
Daniel Summerhays 74m-73s—147
Matt Bettencourt 71m-76s—147
Chris DiMarco 72p-76m—148
Billy Mayfair 73s-77p—150
Michael Bradley 73m-76s—149
Brian Davis 73p-76m—149
Luke List 73m-76s—149
Michael Letzig 73s-78p—151
Rafael Cabrera Bello 73s-79p—152
D.J. Trahan 73p-77m—150
Harris English 75m-75s—150
David Duval 79s-73p—152
Joe Ogilvie 76p-74m—150
Steve Marino 77p-74m—151
Andres Gonzales 77p-74m—151
Aaron Watkins 78s-76p—154
Billy Andrade 79s-75p—154
Bret Nutt 74m-78s—152
Tom Gillis 71m-81s—152
Mitch Lowe 77p-77m—154
Paul Haley II 78s-82p—160








