Tiger Woods hits a drive on the third hole during the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Friday, June 15, 2012, at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
Tiger Woods hits a drive on the third hole during the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Friday, June 15, 2012, at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson shake hands after the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Friday, June 15, 2012, at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
Jim Furyk hits a drive on the fourth hole during the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Friday, June 15, 2012, at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
David Toms hits from a bunker on the 17th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Friday, June 15, 2012, at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? The one thing everybody agreed on entering the U.S. Open was that par would be a good score in any round at the unforgiving Olympic Club course.
Just look at Tiger Woods, David Toms and Jim Furyk.
When the third round started Saturday under blue skies along the California coast, this trio of major champions was tied for the lead at 1 under ? an ordinary number any other week. Not even one other player in the field that began at 156 was at par. And par is shaping up to be a final score that might be all it takes to win.
"I don't see it getting much away from that," said Graeme McDowell, the 2010 champion at Pebble Beach who is two shots behind the leaders. "As this golf course gets firmer and firmer, there's no rain forecast. It's up to the USGA, really. They can have whatever they want with it."
Nobody has had his way with Olympic.
Joe Ogilvie already had four bogeys and a double bogey through the treacherous first six holes Saturday, dropping to 14 over ? six shots over the cut line the day before. The thick rough and towering trees that line the tight, twisting fairways on the undulating Lake Course swallowed so many of golf's best, including defending champion Rory McIlroy.
The 23-year-old from Northern Ireland set a U.S. Open record last year at Congressional with a 131 through 36 holes. He was 19 shots worse at Olympic, with a 73 giving him a two-day score of 150 to miss the cut for the fourth time in his last five tournaments.
"They set it up like a real classic U.S. Open," McIlroy said.
Those who have adjusted are the ones still around for the weekend.
Woods survived a patch of bogeys early in his round for an even 70 that took him another round closer to that elusive 15th major title. Furyk rolled in a 40-foot birdie putt from off the third green in the morning for a 69. Woods and Toms, who showed a steady hand with the putter for a 70, joined him in the afternoon when the conditions were fiery and emotions were frayed.
They were the only players to beat par for 36 holes at 1-under 139.
"This tournament, you're just plodding along," Woods said. "This is a different tournament. You have to stay patient, stay present, and you're just playing for a lot of pars. This is not a tournament where we have to make a bunch of birdies."
A wild afternoon ended that way, too.
The second-round leaders restored some order to a major that for a stunning moment had been taken over by a 17-year-old who only two weeks ago couldn't win his state high school championship.
Beau Hossler went 11 holes without making a bogey, and took the outright lead on one of the toughest holes at Olympic. He got lost in the thick rough and trees on the brutal front nine, dropping five shots in eight holes for a 73 that left him four shots behind.
That wasn't the only surprise.
Also leaving San Francisco far earlier than anyone expected were Luke Donald, the world's top-ranked player, Masters champion Bubba Watson and Dustin Johnson, coming off a win last week at the St. Jude Classic.
It hasn't taken much at this U.S. Open to humble even the best players. When the last group trudged up the hill toward the stately clubhouse at Olympic, the experience at the top of the leaderboard was impossible to ignore.
"Whoever wins this golf tournament is going to be a great champion, somebody that's probably won events before, that can handle the emotions and can handle the adversity in a U.S. Open, and somebody with experience," said Toms, who won the 2001 PGA Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club. "At least that's what I think. You never know. Strange things can happen, but I would think that you would see a lot of that on the leaderboard come late Sunday."
It starts with Woods, who is coming off his second win of the year at the Memorial and looks as strong as ever. Hitting shots in both directions, mainly with irons off the tees, he overcame three straight bogeys on his front nine, two of those shots not far off from being easy birdie chances.
His only regret was not taking advantage of having a wedge in his hand on the last three holes, all birdie opportunities that became pars.
When he regained a share of the lead with Furyk on the 13th with a 4-foot birdie putt, Woods was coming up on a series of holes that allowed players to at least think of making birdie. In a greenside bunker in two on the par-5 16th ? shortened to 609 yards Friday ? Woods blasted out weakly and missed a 12-foot putt. With a mid-iron in his hand in the fairway on the par-5 17th, he went over the green and down a deep slope. Despite a superb pitch to 8 feet, he missed the putt.
And with a wedge from the fairway on the 18th, he came up well short and into a bunker, having to settle for par.
Pars aren't bad, though.
McDowell dropped three shots on his last four holes for a 72. Even so, he was very much in the hunt two shots behind at 141, along with recent LSU alum John Peterson (70), Nicolas Colsaerts of Belgium (69) and Michael Thompson, the first-round leader who followed his opening 66 with a 75.
"It's just tough to have fun out there," McDowell said.
Woods had won eight straight times when he had at least a share of the lead going into the weekend at the majors, a streak that ended at the 2009 PGA Championship when Y.E. Yang chased him down from four shots back. Woods hasn't seriously contended in the final hour of a major since.
Asked what it might take for anyone to win this time, another former winner at this tournament deferred to the USGA.
"If they want 5 over to win, 10 over to win it ... they can hide these pins away," McDowell said. "I would have to imagine around level par."
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Follow Antonio Gonzalez at: www.twitter.com/agonzalezAP
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