Garcia surges to six-stroke lead

Singh, Furyk, Trahan way back at Wachovia Championship

? Tied for the lead and facing a 20-minute wait on the eighth tee, Sergio Garcia was resting in the grass when he caught a frog. Someone told him to eat it, and he playfully held it by his mouth.

“Maybe I should have kissed it to see if it turned into a princess,” Garcia said Saturday.

The way things are going at the Wachovia Championship, it would have turned into a crystal trophy.

Garcia blew away a world-class field at Quail Hollow with five birdies on the tough back nine to polish off the best round of the day, a 5-under 67 that gave him the biggest lead of his career.

Garcia was at 12-under 204 and had a six-shot lead over Jim Furyk, Vijay Singh and D.J. Trahan.

“I told you guys I was struggling with my putting,” Garcia said. “I feel like I’m starting to see the end of the tunnel. I feel like things are starting to go a bit my way.”

Trahan, a 24-year-old rookie, did his best to challenge Garcia until stumbling on the back nine to a 71. Furyk, in his best performance since wrist surgery a year ago, gave himself fleeting hope with a 33 on the back nine for a 69. Singh played in the last group with Garcia and couldn’t keep up, shooting a 71.

“He’s lapping the field right now,” Furyk said. “The golf tournament is in his hands.”

Tiger Woods, who never has finished worse than third after winning the Masters, might see that streak end with a thud. He squandered opportunities on the front nine and failed to make a birdie over the final 11 holes for a 73, leaving him at 1-under 215 and 11 shots behind. Phil Mickelson shot 73 and was at 1-over 217.

It was the third time Garcia has held a 54-hole lead on the PGA Tour. The other two were at the 2001 Buick Classic and the Byron Nelson Championship last year, both times by two shots, and he won both.