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Posted March 15, 2019, 8:50 pm

Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood share lead at Players Championship

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    Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, watches his second shot on the 18th fairway during the second round of The Players Championship golf tournament Friday, March 15, 2019, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

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    Tommy Fleetwood yells as he misses a birdie putt on the fifth green during the second round of The Players Championship golf tournament Friday, March 15, 2019, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Rory McIlroy was nearly as good at the end as Tommy Fleetwood was at the start Friday in The Players Championship.

McIlroy hit a 4-iron to 10 feet for eagle, ran in a 20-foot birdie putt on the island-green 17th and then made a bold play with a towering shot over a tree 20 feet in front of him to secure par. It added to a 7-under 65, and his best start on the TPC Sawgrass in his 10 appearances.

Fleetwood took his good swing from the range to the course and watched it pay off with a birdie-eagle-birdie start that carried him to a 67.

They shared the lead at 12-under 132, three shots clear of anyone else.

And they were nine shots ahead of Tiger Woods, who played solid golf except for one hole — the wrong hole. Woods put two balls into the water on the notorious par-3 17th, leading to a quadruple bogey that wiped out a good start and forced him to settle for a 71.

Given the nature of this golf course — and a forecast for a different wind — the fun might just be starting.

And that's as far as McIlroy was willing to look.

"Winning is a byproduct of doing all the right things, and I feel like if I can continue to do those things well, hopefully I do end up with the trophy on Sunday," he said. "But there's a lot of golf to play before that."

The biggest surprise from the group three shots behind might be the 48-year-old Furyk, mainly because he didn't think he would be at Sawgrass. After devoting two years as Ryder Cup captain, his world ranking plunged 194 spots to No. 231. But a great finish at the start of the Florida swing to tie for ninth moved him high enough in the FedEx Cup to get into the strongest field in golf at the last minute.

And then he delivered his best score in 80 rounds over 25 years, a 64 that put him in the group at 9-under 135.

"I thought this was an off week," Furyk said. "It's a nice gift, an opportunity."

Ian Poulter, who resurrected his PGA Tour career with a runner-up finish at The Players two years ago, had a 66 and was three shots behind, along with Abraham Ancer of Mexico (66) and Brian Harman (69).

Dustin Johnson, the world's No. 1 player, also had an eagle-birdie-par finish for a 68. He was in the group five shots behind.

McIlroy hasn't won since Bay Hill a year ago, though he has had his chances for more. The Arnold Palmer Invitational last week was the ninth time in his last 30 tournaments dating to the start of 2018 that he played in the final group without winning.

But he has been patient. He says his attitude has been good all year, and it can be tested severely on the Players Stadium Course. There is no sense of panic or a need to start pressing if he gets into that position again.

"I just need to keep seeing red numbers," McIlroy said. "I don't need a win. I'm not putting myself under pressure to ... again, winning is a byproduct of doing all the things that I'm doing well. ... If I focus on winning, what goes into that?"

After a sluggish start — even par through seven holes — McIlroy poured it on by taking aim at flags when he could. He ran off four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn, and then blistered a 4-iron with a right-to-left wind allowing him to keep his mind off the water to the right of the green on the par-5 16th. The ball bounced onto the green to 10 feet for birdie.

He followed with a wedge to the back shelf on the island green and another birdie to tie for the lead, and then made his great escape by opening the face of a pitching wedge to get over the tree, and letting the wind guide it back to the green.

Walking toward the green, McIlroy said he told NBC Sports analyst Roger Maltbie that "playing with Phil the last two days maybe inspired me to play a shot like that."

That would be Phil Mickelson, who didn't play very inspired, at all.

Mickelson had another 74 and missed the cut at The Players for the sixth time in the last seven years. He wasn't alone. Jordan Spieth missed the cut for the third time in eight starts this year, getting inside the cut line with a series of birdies before he was slowed by shots into the water on consecutive holes. He had a 69.

Fleetwood knows a thing or two about fast starts. Last month in Mexico, he started eagle-eagle.

This felt just as good, perhaps because of his standing in the tournament. Fleetwood, who shared the 18-hole lead, was two behind when he teed off and back in the lead after just two holes. He made a 12-foot birdie on No. 1, holed a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 second and then made a 25-footer on No. 3.

"I had a great range session warming up, and all you want to do then is make sure you try and take that out onto the course, which was very different," Fleetwood said. "I had the absolute dream start. ... Today was a little bit more up and down, but it's going to be. There was a lot of good stuff, and I just feel really happy with it."