BROOKLINE (Massachusetts), June 18 ― Two-time major winner Collin Morikawa fired a four-under-par 66 to seize the lead late in Friday's second round of the US Open with Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy one stroke adrift.
Seventh-ranked Morikawa stood on five-under 135 after 36 holes at the Country Club, one stroke ahead of second-ranked defending champion Rahm, third-ranked McIlroy and 259th-ranked American Hayden Buckley.
“No one has taken it deep so far and run away,” Morikawa said. “But you know what, right now my game feels really good.
“The last few days is a huge confidence booster for me heading into this weekend, and hopefully we can make some separation somehow.” American Joel Dahmen was still on the 7,254-yard layout on 5-under with three holes remaining.
Morikawa won last year's British Open and the 2020 PGA Championship and the 25-year-old American could become the first player to win three different majors since Tiger Woods.
“I can't really talk about what it would be like to win this one. I've got to focus on tomorrow,” Morikawa said. “I've got to stick to my game plan. I've got to make sure I don't run out of steam... I've just got to figure out a way to focus a little bit deeper and really get dialed in for the next 36.”
Starting on the 10th tee, Morikawa made birdie putts of 10 feet at the 12th hole, 13 feet at the par-5 14th, 14 feet at the 17th and 33 feet at the first.
After missing the fourth green with his approach to set up his lone bogey, Morikawa answered with a disappointing birdie at the par-5 eighth after dropping his second shot four feet from the cup.
“I knew the tempo was a little off,” Morikawa said. “It just happened to be a putt I didn't match up. I'm not too worried about it, really.”
McIlroy, who endured a double-bogey disaster at the third hole, sank a 15-foot birdie putt at the 12th, drove the green in two to set up a tap-in birdie at the par-5 14th and sank a 12-foot birdie putt at 17.
McIlroy, chasing his first major title since 2014, comes off a victory in last week's PGA Canadian Open. Not since 1934 has a player won the week before and then captured the US Open.
Rahm, a back-nine starter, holed a 12-foot eagle putt at par-5 14th, drove the green to set up a birdie at the par-4 fifth and chipped from the rough to set up a tap-in birdie at the eighth.
Buckley, a 26-year-old American developmental tour player, missed the cut in last year's US Open in his only prior major start Top-ranked Masters champion Scottie Scheffler, with an eagle and two birdies in the last six holes, was in a pack on 137.
“I just stayed real patient,” said Scheffler. “I hit it really good. If a few putts had gone in instead of around, it could have been a really special day.” Canada's Adam Hadwin, the 18-hole leader after a 66, shot 72 to stand on 138.
South Africa's M.J. Daffue, making his major debut, birdied four of the first seven holes to lead by three, then made three bogeys in five holes on the back nine and closed with a double bogey to finish on 139.
American Cameron Young aced the 165-yard par-3 sixth hole.
Mickelson misses cut
Six-time major winner Phil Mickelson missed the cut on 11-over 151. The 52-year-old US lefthander was among 15 rebels from the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series playing against US PGA Tour stars for the first time.
LIV players were a combined 53-over on Thursday and 25-over late yesterday.
With the richest purses in golf history, LIV Golf has lured players from the PGA Tour, which banned 17 current and former members last week after they played LIV's debut event in England.
A regular-season LIV event offers US$25 million (RM110.1 million) in prize money, US$7.5 million more than the US Open pays.
The US Golf Association decided to stay with its Open qualifying criteria and didn't ban LIV Golf players. ― AFP
2024-11-06 20:48:28