U.S. Open 2021: Notables who missed the cut at Torrey Pines

U.S. Open 2021: Notables who missed the cut at Torrey Pines

U.S. Open 2021: Notables who missed the cut at Torrey Pines https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

SAN DIEGO — Qualifying for the U.S. Open is a great achievement. Once you are there, making the cut and playing in the final two rounds is another hurdle that needs to be cleared. Only the low 60 players and ties earn Saturday and Sunday tee times at America’s national championship, which means after the second round, it’s ‘Wait ’til next year’ for more than half the 156-man field.

This year, the cutline was 4 over (146).

Among the trunk slammers, there are always a few surprising names, golfers who have achieved great things but for some reason, could not deliver. Below is a list of the notable players at the 121st U.S. Open at Torrey Pines who will not be moving on.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3gGIdg2
Lynch: The U.S. Open, the meanest major of them all, doesn’t do fairytales, but Richard Bland believes

Lynch: The U.S. Open, the meanest major of them all, doesn’t do fairytales, but Richard Bland believes

Lynch: The U.S. Open, the meanest major of them all, doesn’t do fairytales, but Richard Bland believes https://ift.tt/3gCLlJv

SAN DIEGO — Despite the decades of ceaseless agitprop—Francis Ouimet’s upset, Ben Hogan’s comeback, Payne Stewart’s farewell, e pluribus unum marketing—the U.S. Open has never really been an incubator of fairytales. Of dramas, sure. And thrillers. But the previous 120 editions of this championship have witnessed more horrors than syrupy, feel-good fables.

That might explain why Richard Bland was beating balls on the range long after completing his second round at the top of the leaderboard at Torrey Pines. In U.S. Opens, nice guys with a great back story—the 48-year-old Englishman just won his first event in his 478th start—tend to meet the same fate as that kid in a slasher movie who decides to go investigate the noise.

We watch, hoping for the best but with a grim sense of foreboding.

Bland won’t be alone in feeling the vice tighten over the next 48 hours at Torrey Pines to where only one man (maybe) is still drawing breath. The U.S. Open is the most pitiless of the majors, each day a punishing gauntlet from which no competitor ever seems to emerge saying he shot the best score possible. Every round concludes with an official tallying of strokes, and a more private, rueful accounting of those left out there. By mid-afternoon Friday, the 156 players in the field had passed 1,000 bogeys made with the likelihood of a couple hundred more before sunset.

The South Course at Torrey Pines is the most architecturally prosaic venue the USGA visits and would be Exhibit ‘A’ in any malpractice suit against the ‘Open Doctor,’ Rees Jones. But it is adequate for what modern U.S. Opens are intended to do, which is expose every weakness from technical flaws to faintness of heart. Laudable design is immaterial to that objective on the logic that any course can be made difficult. It requires only fertilizer, green rollers and a dab of sadism.

Check. Check. And check.

The leaderboard at the 121st Open is bookended by men in their late 40s: Bland and, 22 strokes to his south, an Australian qualifier named Steve Allan. Until this week, Allan hadn’t competed in a major for 11 years and hadn’t made a cut in one for 16 years. He and Bland have combined for 13 career starts in major championships, just a few more than Phil Mickelson’s six victories in them.

2021 U.S. Open

Steve Allan plays a shot on the 17th hole during the second round at the 2021 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, Calif. on Friday, June 18, 2021. (Darren Carroll/USGA)

Unlike at the Masters, a U.S. Open leaderboard is where kings and cobblers collide. Just 34 days ago, Bland was unknown to even attentive golf fans. Now he finds himself being pursued by guys like Louis Oosthuizen, Bubba Watson and Brooks Koepka (who has won more majors than his prey has played). The elite and the everyman mingle at the other end of matters too. Allan was only four shots worse than Justin Rose, who has finished top 8 in both previous majors this year. On any given day, the talent gap between the best and the rest just isn’t that yawning.

Allan will have some well-known company at the airline check-in desk tonight. Will Zalatoris was runner-up at the Masters and hit as many greens in two days as the leader (26), but a balky putter condemned him. Webb Simpson had won the U.S. Open as many times as he had missed the cut, until today. Billy Horschel, Sam Burns and Garrick Higgo are all good enough to have won recently on the PGA Tour, but weren’t good enough this week to survive the cut. One troubled phenom returned (Matt Wolff) while a comparatively serene one (Viktor Hovland) departed early, WD’ing with an eye injury.

As the second round began to wind down, the north and south poles of the halfway leaderboard were separated by only nine shots. Like most Friday afternoons at U.S. Opens, players made progress long after they had completed their rounds. Rory McIlroy signed for a scrappy 73 shortly before 1 p.m. that left him 1 over for the tournament but he figured he’d be in the top 20 by day’s end. Within a couple hours, he was. Veterans of Open wars—in experience, if not in age— know that sometimes you just have to sit back and let the USGA do its work for you.

The man who spent much of the day in the lead, has only ever played one U.S. Open. But Bland has taken his share of gut punches. He lost several playoffs in qualifying. “I’m not going to lose any sleep over that,” he said cheerfully. “I’m just enjoying this one right now.” When you come across a 48-year-old man who believes in fairytales because he’s seen too much of the other side, it makes you want to believe right along with him. No matter how much we are conditioned to expect something else. Odds are that Bland won’t sleep tonight, but he will dream.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3wHhKnR
Leona Maguire's strong finish powers her to three-shot lead at Meijer LPGA Classic

Leona Maguire's strong finish powers her to three-shot lead at Meijer LPGA Classic

Leona Maguire's strong finish powers her to three-shot lead at Meijer LPGA Classic https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

BELMONT, Mich. — As the holes were filling up on Leona Maguire’s scorecard, it looked like she’d been in a tie for first place heading into the weekend at the Meijer LPGA Classic.

Then her final three holes happened.

The Ireland native finished with a par, eagle and a 30-foot birdie to take a three-shot lead at the end of the second round. She finished the day 8 under to make her total score for the tournament 15 under, three shots better than her closest competitor.

“We were kind of in-between clubs. I absolutely flushed a 5 hybrid, [it] went way further than I thought and pitched pin high and stayed on the green,” Duncan said. “And another really nice putt on nine, that pin was really tucked. I just tried to be disciplined, played 30 feet right of the hole and took my chance.”

She started the round hot, shooting a 5-under 31 on her first nine. But a couple of errant drives cost her once she made the turn, and she turned in consecutive bogeys. Still, she got back on track, going 5 under over her final five holes.

The 26-year-old had to fend off challengers Suh Oh (12 under), who finished 7 under on the day, and Lindy Duncan (11 under ), who also shot 7 under. Maguire said she’s used to having one good day at a tournament, but usually can’t string together consecutive solid days. Her impressive performance has given her confidence heading into the final two rounds.

“Was really proud of how I came out today,” Maguire said. “Last week in San Francisco I was leading after day one and struggled on day two, so it was nice to put a really good number back to back in rounds one and two and even go one better today.”

While she’s in the driver’s seat for her first LPGA win, Duncan is sitting just four shots back looking for her first title as well. It was a career day for the South Floridian, shooting 5 under on her back nine to take the lead into the clubhouse until Maguire and Oh overtook her late in the afternoon.

Even though there was a two-hour rain delay in the morning before she was able to tee off, that might have helped Duncan. She said the greens felt smoother and slower, which let her play a bit more aggressively. But the wet weather still made for its own challenges.

“I think the front nine it was pretty receptive and the greens were definitely rolling a bit smoother,” Duncan said. “I kind of just tried to take it one hole at a time and just take notes as I went on and just tried to pay attention to those little things…it was definitely changing.”

Oh, who took off in the afternoon, is just three shots back of Maguire. She had a bogey-free round Friday and has played just one hole over par through the first two days.

Still, she’s not getting too far ahead of herself thinking of glory. She doesn’t have a score in mind she wants to hit the rest of the weekend. The Australian is just taking it one shot at a time.

“[I] just kind of kept my cool. I think that was quite good,” Oh said. “I guess just have to kind of hit one shot and then the next shot and see how it turns out, just kind of keep it going.”

Nelly Korda, the No. 2-ranked player in the world, made a move on Friday. She shot 6 under for the day, bringing her overall score to 10 under, well within striking distance.

“The greens were definitely a lot softer today so you could be more aggressive,” Korda said. “So I could really hit my numbers today, and I had a lot of good numbers going in.”

The surprise of the tournament is that two-time Meijer LPGA Classic winner Brooke Henderson missed the cut. She shot a 75 on Thursday and rebounded with a 5 under 67 but it wasn’t enough. She finished 2 under, 1 off the cutline.

But back at the top, Maguire is living in the moment. She and Duncan both played college golf at Duke, though they never crossed paths in Durham. Still, they’ve become close friends, practicing together outside of Orlando.

As they head into the final rounds in West Michigan, the two Blue Devils might have to go head to head for their first tournament victory.

“We practice and play together quite a bit,” Maguire said. “She’s been a good friend of mine, and it’ll be nice to go head-to-head with her down the stretch this weekend.”

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3gE7Xtt
U.S. Open: Bubba Watson knows the mental strain of pro golf, and he wants to help Matthew Wolff

U.S. Open: Bubba Watson knows the mental strain of pro golf, and he wants to help Matthew Wolff

U.S. Open: Bubba Watson knows the mental strain of pro golf, and he wants to help Matthew Wolff https://ift.tt/3gJU2Cd

SAN DIEGO – Professional golfers know that if they are asked to talk with the media after a round, they did something good and are probably in contention to win. After signing for his 67 on Friday at Torrey Pines, Bubba Watson did not know where he stood on the leaderboard at the 2021 U.S. Open, but being asked to talk with the media was a good sign. He was escorted to an area known as The Flash. It is a small area where, typically, reporters ask about birdies and bogeys and try to get insight into the round. 

Having started the day at 1 over, Watson was now 3 under par, and two shots off the lead heading into the weekend. However, the first question the two-time Masters champion fielded wasn’t even about him. Instead, it was about a conversation he had with Matthew Wolff about the mental strain and stress of being a professional athlete.

“I love him. I love his family. I love his team,” Watson said candidly. “So I was just talking to them and just shared that I’ve wasted money, I’ve saved money, I’ve bought businesses, sold businesses, I’ve lost 20, 30 pounds because of struggles. I said, I’ve done everything you’re thinking about, I’ve done it all. So I said, so if you ever want advice, just call me, and so that’s what I said.”

On Thursday, Wolff shot 70, and in the same area where Watson talked Friday, he told reporters that he left the PGA Tour earlier this season because he felt he was putting too much pressure on himself. 

“I mean, I love these fans, and I want to play well for them, but right now I’m just really trying to be happy,” Wolff said. “I live a great life and I want to enjoy it.”

Wolff talked about trying to keep things in perspective, about wanting to play well but prioritizing his happiness and wellbeing more than a score. He said talking with people close to him helped. This week, Bubba Watson wanted to be sure that Wolff knew he could relate and that he could be someone Wolff could talk with, too.

“I was going to text him a few weeks ago, but I wanted to talk to him in person,” Watson said. “So that’s what I did. Obviously, he hasn’t called me. He did pretty good yesterday. He had eight birdies. I was just trying to give him my two cents. He didn’t ask for it, but I gave it to him anyway.”

The mental health and wellbeing of athletes has been a hot topic recently. At the recently completed French Open tennis championship in Paris, Naomi Osaka, the top-ranked female tennis player in the world, withdrew after a first-round win.

Before the tournament started, she said she would forgo media requests and interviews. She revealed that after winning the 2018 U.S. Open, she suffered from depression. Michael Phelps, a 23-time Olympic gold medalist in swimming, has also talked about his struggles with depression and how therapy has helped him deal with personal issues. He came out in support of Osaka’s decision.

Watson has been candid about his mental health challenges, his nervousness and quirks. He told Golfweek in November, “I’ve sought help in many different ways, many different forms, trying to overcome (anxiety). It really comes down to me being nuts. I’m trying to make light of it because using humor helps. But it’s all in my head. It’s all anxiety. I think more people are speaking out about mental issues and I want to be one of them.” 

Watson is now 42. He has been married to his wife, Angie, for 17 years and points to that as a highlight of his life. Adopting the couple’s two children is another.

Eventually, Watson returned to talking about how much he hates three-putting, how much the course has changed since he won the Farmers Insurance Open here and what he needs to do to win.

“I’m just hitting big slices, trying to get the ball in play, but I can see this golf course a lot better, and I got some confidence knowing that some areas are patchy, where you can play out of the rough when you miss the fairway,” he said. “As long as you’re missing it in the right places, you still have a chance.”

Bubba seems very happy with that.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3cOOCmQ
Viktor Hovland withdraws from U.S. Open with eye injury

Viktor Hovland withdraws from U.S. Open with eye injury

Viktor Hovland withdraws from U.S. Open with eye injury https://ift.tt/3gJU2Cd

Viktor Hovland withdrew from the 121st U.S. Open at Torrey Pines on Friday because of an eye injury.

Hovland, the No. 13 ranked player in the world and former U.S. Amateur champ, reportedly got sand in his eye during his warm up session Friday, according to Steve Sands of the Golf Channel. Hovland shot a 74 on Thursday at the South Course and then posted four bogeys in a five-hole stretch before making a double.

The Norwegian, playing in his third U.S. Open, had started his round on the back nine and after a double bogey 6 on his 10th hole of the day, No. 1, he called it a week.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3vFTEbK
U.S. Open: Can Jon Rahm keep his cool? So far, so good (barely) at Torrey Pines.

U.S. Open: Can Jon Rahm keep his cool? So far, so good (barely) at Torrey Pines.

U.S. Open: Can Jon Rahm keep his cool? So far, so good (barely) at Torrey Pines. https://ift.tt/3gJU2Cd

SAN DIEGO – Jon Rahm was on the verge of losing his temper.

That’s nothing new for Rahm, whose chili can run hot, but as he missed fairways and visited bunkers, he looked highly combustible. When asked about how Torrey Pines affected his temper, he snapped, his voice rising with a serrated edge: “Am I ever going to escape that question? Like I never lost it. I got a little frustrated on a couple of holes. Just not getting the results sometimes that you’d expect with certain swings. They weren’t that bad.”

Apparently anger, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. Rahm overcame an erratic driver with a hole-out birdie and a bunch of clutch par saves in the middle of his round to shoot 1-under 70 for a 36-hole total of 3-under 139 and just two strokes behind Richard Bland at the halfway point of the 121st U.S. Open.

“I feel like yesterday I hit it really, really well, hit a lot of fairways. Just made a couple of mistakes going into the greens that cost me a few bogeys, a few more than I would have liked,” Rahm said. “Today it was the opposite. Took me a while to get going, didn’t hit my second fairway until the 13th hole. I just had to survive.”

Rahm fought a case of the lefts off the tee, hitting just five of 14 fairways in his second round. He tugged one left at No. 5 and made his only bogey on the front nine, but bounced back a hole later with birdie. Rahm drove it left at No. 10 and went bunker to bunker but canned a right-to-left 10-foot bender for par and pumped his fist. His tee shot at the par-3, 11th was the first sign that his temper was flaring. With his tee shot still in the air, Rahm berated himself, bellowing, “Dude, how bad are you swinging it today? Don’t plug, don’t plug. Goodness, gracious Jon, that was so bad.”

But he rescued par again and made a fist with his right hand in celebration. He drove it left again into a bunker at 12, but escaped with a beauty to 15 feet and another par. It was the type of run that Rahm required to keep his round from getting away from him and potentially shooting himself out of the championship.

“I’ve got to say, that stretch of putts on 10, 11, 12 was key,” he said. “Things could have taken a turn for the worse, and I was able to save some great three pars in a row.”

But after roasting a drive at the par-5 13th, Rahm tried to mash a 5-wood from 272 yards. It didn’t go as planned.

“I just hit is so badly and it ended up so short in a tough lie,” said Rahm, who either was checking the flexibility of his shaft or on the verge of snapping it after the shot caught the middle of three bunkers short of the green. Then he chunked it into the next bunker. “Just making a bogey there was probably the most frustrated I got today.”

His chili was bordering on nuclear level when he dumped his approach at 14 into the front bunker, but his anger level returned to a better place when he holed out and pumped his right fist in glee.

“I was a bit more vocal on 14 after the second shot because I felt that was a good swing and I felt like it just got gusted,” he said. “But, hey, I made the next shot, so I can’t really say much. I never really lost it.”

Indeed, that was the key for the fiery Rahm. He’s never going to be unflappable like Brooks Koepka or Dustin Johnson, and that’s OK, but the U.S. Open tests every part of a player’s game, including his ability to deal with the stretches of discomfort.

Rahm, who relies on a consistent fade, closed with four tee shots that he described as exactly perfect, and closed with a birdie at 18.

“They were all exactly the way I thought they were going to be, the way I visualized them,” he said of the tee shots.

At the midway point of the U.S. Open, Rahm, world No. 3, is lurking in pursuit of his first major and the key ingredient may be not a hot putter, but a cool, calm demeanor.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/2SIxmZy
U.S. Open leader Richard Bland, 48, wants to 'give those gym-goers a run for their money'

U.S. Open leader Richard Bland, 48, wants to 'give those gym-goers a run for their money'

U.S. Open leader Richard Bland, 48, wants to 'give those gym-goers a run for their money' https://ift.tt/2S9mbsG

SAN DIEGO – As Englishman Richard Bland walked from one media stop to the next after shooting a second-round 67 at the 121st U.S. Open, he smiled and said, “Rory has to do this week in, week out, huh?”

That would be Rory McIlroy, the former World No. 1 and four-time major winner who is one of the faces of golf and usually in demand for the post-round car wash of media obligations. But this week he’s looking up at Bland, a 48-year-old journeyman pro playing in the U.S. for just the second time and his fourth major championship. All of this was new to Bland, who made 478 starts on the European Tour before becoming the oldest first-time winner on the circuit last month at the Betfred British Masters.

That victory combined with a third-place finish in Denmark helped book a spot in the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines and Bland is taking advantage, following up a 1-under 70 on Thursday by carding seven birdies in a round of 67 on the South Course and becoming the surprise clubhouse leader by one stroke over South African Louis Oosthuizen. If it holds up, he will be the oldest 36-hole leader in U.S. Open history.

But Bland didn’t sound surprised to be in the trophy hunt. “When I saw this place on Monday, it kind of set up to my eye,” he said. “It’s all there just straight in front of me, and that’s the kind of golf course I like. I thought, I can play around here.”

In his Twitter bio, Bland states that he is a European Tour professional golfer during the week, the joke being that he’s taken a few too many weekends off over the year. It was just two years ago, at age 46, that Bland missed so many 36-hole cuts that he was demoted to the Challenge Tour, the minor league circuit of the European Tour. But he never gave up and ignored the signs that he might be washed up. He still believed that he could regain his form and eventually win, and he did just that.

U.S. Open: Leaderboard | Photo gallery

“What am I going to do, go and get an office job? I’m not that intelligent, I’m afraid,” he said. “The old saying is you get knocked down seven times, you get up eight. I’ve always had that kind of attitude that you just keep going. You never know in this game, you just keep going.”

His joy after beating Italy’s Guido Migliozzi with a par on the first playoff hole was something to behold and it became one of the feel-good stories of the year. Only Malcolm MacKenzie had played more European Tour events (509) before winning his maiden title. The response on social media, with the likes of Fred Couples and Lee Westwood sending congratulations, overwhelmed Bland.

U.S. Open

Richard Bland waves after his putt on the ninth green during the second round of the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

“I’m just a guy who’s won a golf tournament really, when you boil it down,” he said. “But as it all sunk in, I think it was just more satisfaction than anything that I kind of got what I’ve always wanted. I want more. Every golfer wants more. Hopefully I can do it again.”

Perhaps his caddie, Australian Kyle Roadley, summarized his bosses perseverance best.

“A lot of tenacity, a lot of hard work, there’s a lot of guys that come and go in this game and to stick at it for as long as he has, hats off to him,” he said.

A spot in the U.S. Open – just his fourth major in his career, one per decade beginning with the 1998 British Open – was among the spoils of victory but he still floated in under the radar. He doesn’t even have a sponsor for his ball cap, sporting the logo of his home club, The Wisley Club in Woking, England, which gave him 10 hats to wear this week.

“So, if anyone is offering,” he said with a smile.

Don’t be surprised if he shows up with a sponsor by his Saturday tee time. His rhinoceros headcover also is telling, part of a charitable commitment in which he donates money for every birdie he makes to an organization called Birdies4Rhinos.

“Two things I can’t stand is three-putting and animal cruelty,” he said.

The putter behaved on Friday. Starting his round on hole No. 10, Bland carded birdies on five of his first eleven holes and climbed to 6 under for the championship before giving a stroke back at No. 8. It made for an easy day on the bag for the man nicknamed Roach.

“He knows what he’s doing,” Roadley said. “I’m just out there peeling bananas and telling him where the wind is, pretty much.”

U.S. Open

The caddie for Richard Bland holds the sixth green pin flag during the second round of the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course. Mandatory Credit: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports

Roadley is 53 and was on the bag last year when Finland’s Sami Valimaki, 22, won the European Tour’s Oman Open. But he got canned because Valimaki wanted a caddie more his age that he could relate to. Roadley began working for Bland in December during the tour’s South African swing and said they were just a pair of graybeards giving it their best.

“Rolling back the years, baby, that’s what it is all about,” Roadley said.

In a year where Stewart Cink won at 48 and Phil Mickelson became the first 50-year-old to claim a major, Bland said he was going to “give those gym-goers a run for their money.”

His confidence is high and he’s finding fairways, something that he’s been doing with regularity since a driver change last month. Bland spent some time last week with his golf coach, longtime Sky Sport TV reporter Tim Barter, who he calls the best coach in the game.

“In golfing terms, we just kind of speak the same language,” Bland said. “He’s part of the furniture. Just took me 20 years to listen to him.”

Listen up, golf fans, it took Bland 478 events to win the first time. Who says it can’t take just four to win a major?

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/2Ud4adD
U.S. Open: After late range session, Bryson DeChambeau had a middle-of-the-night swing thought

U.S. Open: After late range session, Bryson DeChambeau had a middle-of-the-night swing thought

U.S. Open: After late range session, Bryson DeChambeau had a middle-of-the-night swing thought https://ift.tt/3ciYGo5

SAN DIEGO – There are very few lists of outstanding accomplishments in golf that do not include either Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson or Tiger Woods. The list of golfers who have won back-to-back U.S. Opens is one of them.

Willie Anderson was the first of seven golfers to do it, winning three in a row from 1903 to 1905 before Bobby Jones won in 1929 and 1930. Ben Hogan won two in a row in 1950 and 1951. The last man to win two in a row is Brooks Koepka, who won at Erin Hills in 2017 and Shinnecock Hills the following year.

Bryson DeChambeau won the U.S. Open last year at Winged Foot and wants to be the eighth name on that list. After shooting a 2-under 69 Friday at Torrey Pines, he is even par for the tournament and five shots behind England’s Richard Bland. Heading into the weekend, he’s still got a shot.

Walking off the course Thursday night, the 27-year-old may not have felt that way. He was frustrated and headed to the range to hit some balls. In the dark. He wound up staying in the practice area until after 9 p.m.

“I couldn’t see very well, and it obviously being very dark, they shut the lights off, which is fine,” he said. “I’ve hit golf balls in the dark plenty of times.”

While he did not find the swing feel he was seeking, DeChambeau said that it came to him in the middle of the night.

“I found something this morning,” he said. “I was sleeping, and it came to me in the middle of the night. I woke up and I was like, ‘Hmm, I’m going to try this,’ and I went out, and my intuition is pretty good, so I went out and tried it and it worked, just keeping the right wrist bent for a lot longer through impact.”

That thought needed a few holes to kick in because Friday morning, DeChambeau’s round began with bogeys on the 10th (his first of the day) and the 12th holes. That raised his overall score to 4 over.

However, a 16-footer for birdie on the par-5 13th began a solid run.

On 16, his tee shot on the 223-yard par 3 landed about 30 feet short of the hole but bounced and trundled to within 3 feet before stopping and setting up a kick-in birdie. On 18, a 571-yard par 5, DeChambeau hit a 339-yard tee shot before leaving his approach shot 25 feet below the hole. After making the eagle putt, he was suddenly 2 under for the day and back to even par for the tournament.

A birdie at the first hole got the building crowd going, but he wasted a scoring chance on the second hole, hit a poor tee shot on the par-3 third that led to a bogey and then missed makeable birdie putts on the fourth, fifth and sixth holes.

“I feel like I got my C, C-plus game with my irons, and my driving is like B, putting is A,” DeChambeau said Friday. “I’m putting really well, but I feel like if I can clean up my iron play and get a little more comfortable with the irons and the drivers, I’ll have a good chance for this weekend.”

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3zBcZOE
Lindy Duncan shining at Meijer LPGA Classic with a 17-year-old on the bag

Lindy Duncan shining at Meijer LPGA Classic with a 17-year-old on the bag

Lindy Duncan shining at Meijer LPGA Classic with a 17-year-old on the bag https://ift.tt/3vzCVXD

BELMONT, Michigan — When Lindy Duncan strolled into the clubhouse with the lead through two rounds of the Meijer LPGA Classic, she wasn’t accompanied by a longtime confidant carrying her bag like so many other pros.

Instead, it was 17-year-old Aubree Crane, who met Duncan less than a week ago.

“I was busy at tournaments so my dad called the caddiemaster [at Blythfield Country Club] and told them a little about me,” Duncan said. “I’m a bit on the quiet side and they recommended Aubree.”

The 17-year-old Rockford High School student normally caddies at Blythfield to make some extra cash when she’s not in class. Though Duncan reads her own greens and picks her own clubs, Crane has been a welcome addition to her team.

She’s watching one of the most successful streaks in Duncan’s career too. After two rounds she holds the lead at 11 under. The South Floridian is in search of her first win on the LPGA Tour. So this weekend in West Michigan could be memorable for both of them.

“It really has been surreal, I don’t think it’s really hit yet,” Crane said. “Like this is the big leagues, this is really serious, but I’m sure it will sink in later.”

Lindy Duncan (right) poses with her caddy Aubree Crane. (Photo by Will Kennedy/Holland Sentinel/USA Today Network)

In Friday’s second round, Crane was right by Duncan’s side as she shot 7 under, totaling eight birdies along the way. One of those birdies, on the par-4 16th hole, she sank from about 20 feet out.

It was a bit of a rollercoaster going on in Duncan’s head when the ball came off the face of the putter. But when it dropped in the cup it helped give her a strong push to finish the rest of the round.

“It was rolling and I was joking with one of the other caddies after because I said, Go and then I said, Sit and then I said, Go, and it just dropped,” Duncan said. “The crowd there gave me a really nice cheer, so that felt great.”

The ovation the crowd gave Duncan is something that Crane will never forget. She said every moment she’s spent on the course this week has been like a dream that she doesn’t want to wake up from.

The coolest part though has been seeing the world’s best golfers up close and personal. While her family, friends and other Blythfield caddies are on the outside of the yellow ropes, she’s on the inside.

“I’ve been able to see and meet some really cool people this week,” Crane said. “Just being really involved has been so cool, it’s much more than I could have ever imagined it to be.”

So with 36 holes to go for the unlikely pair, they’re feeling confident heading into the weekend. Duncan said she knows she’s playing well right now and hopes she can sustain it for a couple more days.

But when she inevitably goes through some tough times on the course, she’ll just power through it. If her caddy can carry a bag that’s as big as she is for four hours a day, then Duncan can overcome a bad shot here or there.

“She’s just a great person to be out there with,” Duncan said. “She’s tough, she’s carrying this bag, got blisters on her feet, she doesn’t complain about anything.”

—Contact Assistant Sports Editor Will Kennedy at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @ByWillKennedy and Facebook @Holland Sentinel Sports.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3wFusDM