American Mark Wilson stunned the field with a late, great 10-under 62 in  Friday's second round of the Humana Challenge to snatch a share of the  halfway lead with compatriots Ben Crane and David Toms. 
                                
 
Wilson carded eight birdies and an eagle in his flawless 62 to  join Crane and Toms on 16-under heading into the weekend of a re-jigged,  four-round tournament formerly known as the Bob Hope Classic and played  over five rounds.
The 37-year-old Wilson made the ideal start by shooting birdies  on his first three holes and made the  turn with his score at 5-under  31. 
A sixth birdie on the 10th sparked another assault on the Palmer  Course at PGA West, one of the three being used in the Palm Springs area  of California this week and the site of the final round on Sunday. 
For at the very next hole, the par-five 11th, Wilson fired an eagle. 
But that wasn't all. 
Further birdies followed on the 16th and 18th holes before he was finally done 
A red hot putter was clearly Wilson's most dynamic tool and he was quick to acknowledge it. 
"I just rolled in some long putts early ...and that kind of got  me going," Wilson said after posting what was his career-best score on  the PGA Tour. 
"I birdied two of the par-fives, got an eagle in there too and  just felt like I did everything good. My mind was in a good spot." 
On the day, Crane's 63, also on the Palmer course, put him just a  tad behind Wilson, but it was far more erratic, with a front nine of 32  followed by a back nine of 31 that featured two bogeys, an eagle, five  birdies and just one par. 
But he was delighted with his score, nevertheless.  
"We made a couple of little adjustments with my swing, a couple  of shoulder alignment things, and it's freed me up," Crane, who won his  fourth PGA Tour title at last year's McGladrey Classic, told the media  after totalling just 22 putts. 
"And then my putting coach came in last week and we worked on  seeing the line and hitting my line with the putting and I was able to  do that too. 
"I made a lot of 10 and 15-footers, and all my kind-of-close  putts for birdie. I putted extremely well and every part of my game felt  great. I guess that's how you do it."  
Toms, who, in the meantime, had soared into a share of the lead  with a sensational birdie-eagle-birdie finish on the Nicklaus course at  PGA West to post a 65 as the leading trio moved three shots clear of  Colombia's Camilo Villegas, who had been the joint overnight leader with  Toms, and three lesser-known Americans, Harris English, Chris Kirk and  Bobby Gates who were tied for 4th at 13-under. 
Toms, 44,  said: "I started to hit some better shots, hit some  good putts that didn't go in and then made a few that did and finished  great. I turned just a so-so day into a pretty solid day. 
"I knew that I was playing well, it was a matter of time when I  would start making some birdies and I finished really strong. So I just  stayed patient all day."  
Blast from the past Chris DiMarco is a shot further back on 12  under after a 64 which boosted his hopes of claiming only his second  top-10 finish in his last 87 events. 
"The problem with golf is you have to play through injuries," DiMarco told the media.. 
"So you tend to work yourself into some bad habits and what  you're used to seeing isn't happening as much, so your confidence goes a  little bit. 
"So as far as confidence goes, my confidence is really coming  back, I'm hitting the ball as good as I've hit it in a long, long time." 
World No 8 Dustin Johnson, the highest ranked player in this  week's event,  withdrew on Friday due to pain from the knee on which he  had surgery in November, while a rusty Phil Mickelson is 15 shots off  the pace on one-under after adding a 69 to his opening 74. 
Level with Mickelson was Australia's former world number one Greg  Norman, who is playing in the $5.6 million event for the first time  since 1986 after being persuaded to return by former US president Bill  Clinton, whose foundation is partnering Humana as the hosts of the  event. 
Defending champion Jhonattan Vegas of Venezuela, who won last  year's title in a playoff with Americans Bill Haas and Gary Woodland,  was at a distant 2-under after returning a level-par 72 at La Quinta  Country Club. 
TOP 10 LEADERBOARD 
PGA West (Nicklaus Course)
(US unless stated, par 72)  
128 Ben Crane 65 63, Mark Wilson 66 62, David Toms 63 65  
131 Camilo Villegas (Col) 63 68, Chris Kirk 68 63, Harris English 69 62 Bobby Gates 68 63   
132 Chris Di Marco 68 64, John Mallinger 67 65, Tommy Biershenk  68 64, Ken Duke 67 65, Brandt Snedeker 64 68, Cameron Tringale 68 64
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