Justin Thomas went from a fast finish one day to a fast start the next, and it carried him to a 7-under 65 Friday and a one-shot lead in the Zozo Championship at Sherwood in Thousand Oaks, Calif.
Thomas wasn't particularly thrilled, except for his position, mainly because the final stretch of holes was still fresh on his mind and he closed with six consecutive pars on a day when the field made birdie or better just over 33% of the time.
South Hadley’s Richy Werenski led the way with 12 birdies for a 61, the lowest score in a tour-sanctioned competition at Sherwood, breaking Tiger Woods’s record. After shooting a 72 on Thursday, Werenski sits at 11 under, three strokes behind Thomas.
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Woods made eight birdies in his round of 66, and he still didn’t pick up any shots against the lead. The defending champion at the Zozo Championship — he won last year in Japan — was still 12 shots behind.
“Got off to a much better start and kept rolling,” Woods said.
Thomas finished late Thursday afternoon with a 29 on the back nine at Sherwood for a 65. He began the second round on the back nine and ran off four straight birdies, chipping in on the par-3 12th, and played it in 31.
But after two birdies in three holes to start the front nine — he hit into the water on the par-5 second hole and still managed to escape with par — he didn't convert any birdie chances.
Thomas was at 14-under 130, one stroke clear of Lanto Griffin and Dylan Frittelli, who each had a 65 and each made bogey on the final hole.
Griffin tied Thomas with a 5-foot birdie on the seventh hole and then a 5-iron that didn’t turn out the way he had envisioned — he aimed 25 feet left and hit it right at the flag, 15 feet behind it.
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“Pushed it right at the flag and it lands a foot from the hole,” Griffin said. “Then Rickie (Fowler) hit right where I was trying to hit it and his caddie said, ‘Good shot.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, that’s where I was trying to hit it.'”
It worked out fine, but he dropped back with a clunky 9-iron on the ninth hole that came up nearly 30 yards short of the hole and he missed a 10-foot par putt.
Patrick Cantlay found his putting touch and and shot 65. He was two shots behind, along with Scottie Scheffler, who also had a 65.
Low scores were everywhere on a course that is short by PGA Tour standards and has five par 5s that are reachable in two, even without hitting driver off the tee. There has been little wind, pleasant weather. And different from the days of the Woods' holiday event in December, a 78-man field makes it likely more players are going low, especially when they see what everyone else is doing.
Woods couldn't be much worse from Thursday, especially on the par 5s. He played them in 3 over in the opening round of 76, his highest score in his 13th year playing Sherwood. He played them in 4 under on Friday.
Phil Mickelson played them in 3 over Friday, but it was really just a couple of par 5s that ate him up.
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He sent his tee shot off the property to the left on the 11th hole and made bogey. And on the 13th, he sent two shots into what amounts to a jungle left of the fairway and made a quadruple-bogey 9. He shot 74 and was near the bottom of the pack, one week after winning for the second straight time on the 50-and-older PGA Tour Champions.
Making birdies is not a problem for Rory McIlroy. He's just not getting much out of them. McIlroy made seven birdies in the opening round, but he had three bogeys, two double bogeys and one club snapped over his knee on the back nine. On Friday, he made eight birdies and still only managed a 67.
“So I’ve made 15 birdies in the first two days, which usually would put you right up at the top of the leaderboard. I just made too many mistakes,” McIlroy said. “It was the same story last week, sort of the same story at Winged Foot. Just one of those stretches where the good stuff’s there, but the bad stuff is sort of taking away from the fact that I’m hitting good shots and making birdies.”
Thomas has won the last four times he had a 36-hole lead, though this is different. Twenty players were within four shots of the lead, all of them at 10 under or better. He is playing well, making birdies and it was no time to let up.
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“I played well. I’m not very pleased with the finish,” he said. “The last six holes, I would have liked to at least have got something. Having a 5-iron and a 5-wood out of the fairway into two par 5s and making two pars is not good. I just wasn’t near as tight and tidy those last four holes.”
McDonald leads LPGA event in Georgia
Ally McDonald is trying to leave everyone behind — and not get too far ahead of herself.
McDonald shot a 4-under 68 to take a one-stroke lead into the weekend in the LPGA Drive On Championship-Lake Reynolds Oconee in Greensboro, Ga.
“I’m trying to just execute and stick to my game plan,” McDonald said. “I think it’s really easy as a person who has never won to get ahead of yourself. We all really, really want to win. That’s why we do this. That’s why we compete — to put yourself in contention as much as we can.”
The 27-year-old from Mississippi made five straight birdies in the middle of the round, then gave back two strokes with bogeys on the par-4 fifth and par-5 sixth.
“I was just thinking like, `I don’t want to discredit my round just because I played a couple bad holes towards the end of the day,'” McDonald said. "I put myself in a great position to hit some really good shots and it was really solid for, I guess, would’ve been 13 holes. "
She had a 10-under 134 total in the first-year event on the Great Waters Course.
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“The next two days I’m just going to try to execute my game plan, stick to one shot at a time,” McDonald said. “If I find myself getting ahead, I need to regroup, back off, and be right in the moment, be present, and try to execute the shot I have.”
Danielle Kang was tied for second with Bianca Pagdanganan of the Philippines in the event added to the schedule because of the COVID-19 pandemic that shut down women’s golf for five months. The tour returned with another Drive On tournament in Toledo, Ohio, in late July, with Kang winning that event and again the following week in Sylvania, Ohio.
Kang, tied for the first-round lead with Jennifer Song after a 65, birdied the par-5 18th for a 70. Kang leads the Race to CME Globe and, at No. 5 in the world, is the top-ranked player in the field.
Canter eyes European breakthrough
Laurie Canter is eyeing a maiden European Tour title after adding a second-round 68 to his spectacular opening 12-under 60 to keep the lead at the halfway stage of the Italian Open.
At 16 under, the Englishman leads by two from compatriot Ross McGowan, with South Africa’s Dean Burmester two shots further back in third.
“You can’t take your foot off around here, the scoring is going to be good, [and] a lot of good players behind,” Canter said.
He got off to a flying start on a gloomy day in Brescia, with three birdies in the first four holes. Another birdie at the ninth looked like setting him up to establish a commanding lead, but after a poor tee shot at the 11th led to a bogey, he lost his momentum before birdieing the last.
McGowan reeled off eight birdies in a flawless 64.
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Richy Werenski sets course record, Justin Thomas takes lead in Zozo Championship - The Boston Globe
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