The tournament will resume third-round play Sunday morning with Mark Wilson holding a three-stroke lead over Ben Crane.
The pro-am tournament reported no injuries, but called an early halt after 35-mph winds rampaged across the Palm Springs area in the early afternoon. The amateur players, including former President Bill Clinton, won’t get to finish their rounds on Sunday.
“It’s really bad,” said Slugger White, the PGA Tour’s vice president of rules and competitions. “They’ve got a lot of trees down. It’s a real mess. … We knew (the wind) was going to be bad, but we thought it would be something we could play with, and then the bottom fell out.”
White said he believes they can finish the four-round event Sunday “in a perfect world.” Wilson doubts it after ferocious gusts interrupted a previously perfect weekend of Palm Springs weather.
“It’s amazing how it happened so quickly, but we’ve seen it before,” said Wilson, who’s at 21 under for the tournament after going 5 under through 15 holes at the La Quinta Country Club course, which sustained the most damage. “I think they made the right call. You don’t want to see anybody get hurt.”
Wilson was a co-leader after two rounds with Crane and David Toms, who dropped back to 15 under. Zach Johnson moved within four strokes of the lead after going 6 under through 13 holes.
With tee times at 7:30 a.m. Sunday morning, White believes it might be possible to finish the event on time. Most players are staying in Southern California next week for the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.
“I don’t know how they could get it done tomorrow, but more power to them if they do,” Wilson said.
McGirt still on course
With four holes to play,Fairmont native William McGirt was 9 under par for the tournament and was in good shape to make his ninth straight cut.McGirt, who started play on the back nine of the La Quinta course, bogeyed his last hole, a par 5, before the high winds forced the suspension of play.







