English leads at Torrey, Mickelson follows Woods out

English leads at Torrey, Mickelson follows Woods out

LA JOLLA (UNITED STATES) - Harris English fired a six-under par 66 on Friday to grab a two-stroke lead at the Farmers Insurance Open, as five-time major winner Phil Mickelson joined Tiger Woods on the sidelines.

Harris English waits to play a shot from the fairway on the 18th hole on the north course during round two of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course on February 6, 2015 in La Jolla, California

English had six birdies and no bogeys on the North Course at Torrey Pines, the easier of the two layouts used in the first two rounds of the $6.3 million US PGA Tour event.

The final two rounds will be played on the tougher South Course, but neither Woods nor Mickelson will be there.

Former world number one Woods hobbled off with an aching back after 11 holes of his opening round on Thursday, while Mickelson posted a 72 on the North Course to miss the cut.

English, a two-time winner on the US tour, leads the weekend charge with a 10-under total of 134. American Nick Watney fired a 65 to head a group on 136 that also includes Scotland's Martin Laird, who posted a 68, and Venezuela's Jhonattan Vegas, who signed for a 69.

Nicholas Thompson, who led the first round with a 64, carded a 73 and was alone in fifth on 137.

Australia's Jason Day and England's Ian Poulter headlined a group of 10 players tied for sixth on 138.

Mickelson's even par effort was better than his two-over opening round, but putting woes doomed him to a second straight missed cut.

"It's very frustrating for me right now," said the 44-year-old American. "I felt really ready to start the year and these first few weeks have been very poor. I feel like I'm hitting the ball tee to green quite well, really well, but my putting is beyond pathetic.

"If I can't get back to the levels of 2013, I'm not sure what I'm going to do," added Mickelson, who is coming off a season in which he failed to win for the first time since 2003.

Mickelson, who tried both a conventional and "claw" putting grip, admitted that his struggles on the greens were getting him down.

"I'm down because I see other parts of my game do very well, but putting as bad as I have, it starts to creep into some of the other areas, too," he said.

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