"First two holes were a shaky start," he said. "Then I got back on track and started playing real well again."
Na still struggles with his vision, having eye surgery last month and wondering if it got worse. But he can see the ball when he swings, and he can see it disappear into the hole, so that's enough for him at the moment.
Stephen Marino also had eye surgery in the offseason.
"I went through a few caddies last year, and they all told me I was blind," he said.
Marino is seeing much better, and he shot a 67 to be in third place at 132, three shots behind. He holed a couple of birdie putts from 20 feet, hit a few irons close enough not to worry and was atop the leaderboard coming to the par-5 ninth, the easiest scoring hole on the course. But he found a bunker, with the ball on a slope, and just got it out into tricky rough.
His chip ran 8 feet by the hole, and Marino took bogey that felt much worse.
"That kind of halted me a little bit, to make bogey on that hole," he said. "But I made a couple of long birdie putts earlier, and it all evens itself out in the end."
He will be paired with 51-year-old Fred Funk, who got a swing tip from his wife after Thursday's round and put that to good use with a 64, including a birdie-eagle finish.
"Not bad for an old guy," Funk said.
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