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Rory McIlroy and Patrick Cantlay Tough It Out, Sharing BMW Lead


OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. — Rory McIlroy doesn’t need fans to help him keep his head in the game at the BMW Championship. Olympia Fields is so tough that it won’t allow anything but his full attention on every shot.

McIlroy and Patrick Cantlay made their share of mistakes on Friday and shrugged them off, because that’s bound to happen on the toughest test the PGA Tour has seen this year. By the end of another steamy afternoon south of Chicago, they were the sole survivors to beat par.

One week after McIlroy admitted to going through the motions without spectators around to provide the cheers, he had a one-under-par 69 and shared the 36-hole lead with Cantlay.

It was plenty tough for Tiger Woods, whose PGA Tour season appears to be two rounds from being over.

Woods didn’t have enough good shots to atone for his bad ones, and he had to make a 35-foot par putt on his final hole to shoot a 75, leaving him nine shots behind. He was toward the bottom of the pack at a tournament in which he needs to finish around fourth to be among the top 30 who advance to the Tour Championship.

Cantlay holed a 50-foot chip for birdie and holed out a 50-yard wedge for eagle. He also missed the green on three of the par-3s, the last one leading to a double bogey. He finished with a 6-iron out of the thick rough and made a 40-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole. It added to a 68, matching the best score of the round.

He and McIlroy were at one-under 139, a shot ahead of Hideki Matsuyama and Dustin Johnson, who were going in opposite directions when it was time to sign their scorecards. Matsuyama, the only player to reach four under at any point this week, dropped four shots over his last 10 holes for a 73. Johnson finished birdie-birdie for 69.

The phrase “U.S. Open” is being heard a lot more than “FedEx Cup” this week.

“I think the test is what’s helped me focus and concentrate, because if you lose focus out there for one second — just one lapse in concentration can really cost you around here,” McIlroy said. “I think one of the big keys this week is just not making big numbers. If you hit it out of position, get it back in position — make sure that your worst score is bogey and move on. Honestly, bogeys aren’t that bad out here.”

McIlroy made a mistake on the 14th hole by going long and left, and only a great wedge to a back pin to 5 feet kept him from a big blunder, even though he missed the par putt. He flirted with trouble later in his round on the fifth hole with a wedge from 134 yards that came up 30 yards short, the pin tucked behind a big bunker. He left that in collar short of the green and got up and down for bogey.

Cantlay doesn’t expect to hole out twice a round with wedges and hopes he can sharpen up his game a little. Still, he loves the idea of having to think and plot his way around the course.

“It’s about as stiff of a test as you would want,” he said. “It’s very, very difficult, and you have to play from the fairway, and you have to play from below the hole, frankly. The greens have so much slope on them that you really need to be putting uphill. And so if you’re in the rough, it gets exponentially harder to do that.”

For those playing well — anywhere within a few shots of par, in this case — it was an enjoyable challenge. For everyone, regardless of the score, it was a grind.

“I don’t know if any rain will matter, really,” Kevin Kisner said after a bogey-bogey finish had ruined an otherwise good day and given him a 70, leaving him three shots behind. “I think even par wins the golf tournament.”

Doesn’t 280 always win the United States Open? That’s what Arnold Palmer used to say.

And this feels like a U.S. Open.

Go back to the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills two years ago to find the last time someone won at over par (Brooks Koepka). For nonmajors, the tour said no one had won with an over-par score since Bruce Lietzke at the Byron Nelson Classic in 1981.

It’s a huge change from last week, when Johnson won by 11 shots at 30-under 254.

“Last week was fun, too,” Johnson said. “But this week is more of a grind, that’s for sure. Every single hole out here is difficult. You’ve got to really be focused on every shot that you hit.”

Among those two shots behind was Louis Oosthuizen, whose birdie in the dark on the final hole last week at TPC Boston moved him to No. 70, letting him qualify for the BMW Championship.

“This is the golf course I needed to do what I must do,” he said of moving into the top 30. “Look, this can go really south on you quickly. You can shoot six, seven over on this golf course very quickly. But if you really stick to it and play middle of the greens and lag those putts, you can make a lot of pars. And you’re not going to lose spots if you’re making pars.”


Source: Golf - nytimes.com

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