Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Morikawa back in swing of things

- Steve DiMeglio

DUBLIN, Ohio - After missing the first cut of his pro career two weeks ago at the Travelers Championsh­ip, Collin Morikawa found his breadand-butter cut.

Sure seems he's whole again. The youngster out of Cal followed his pace-setting 7-under-par 65 in Thursday's first round with a 66 Friday at Muirfield Village Golf Club to extend his lead to four shots midway through the second round. Morikawa had things going so well he lost count of how many birdie circles he made on his scorecard.

The second round was called because of darkness with several golfers on the course.

“I didn't even realize I made nine,” he said with a smile.

Well, you might lose track, too, if you fell into a routine of hitting the fairway, hitting your approach inside 10 feet and canning the putt. Morikawa made birdie putts of 2, 2, 6, 6, 6, 6, 8, 15 and 21 feet. Even a 75-minute storm delay didn't thwart Morikawa as he knocked in his birdie from 6 feet on 7 less than a minute after the horn blew to resume play.

“For the most part, the game feels good from top to bottom,” Morikawa said. “Obviously nice to hit some approach shots, hit my cut that I just hadn't had the past couple weeks. ”

Morikawa, 23, began his pro career by making it to the weekend in his first 22 tournament­s before falling short at the Travelers. Only Tiger Woods, with 25, had a better stretch to begin his career in the past 30 years.

Morikawa hit the reset button and then rediscover­ed his cut on the eve of the tournament with help from his coach of 15 years, Rick Sessinghau­s. Morikawa said he knew his ball-striking wasn't to his standards at the RBC Heritage and then, after he felt fine in practice rounds at the Travelers, he couldn't call upon his fade.

“So when I go take my week off, then you kind of go back to the drawing board, see what's not working, what's a little different,” he said. “I just didn't have the cut shot where I could aim six yards left and be able to pull it back to the pin and feel comfortabl­e wherever the pin was. For me, it just was a lot of rotational stuff, really basic stuff, just pretty much starting at the setup, and something we figured out actually late Wednesday after I finished my practice round stuck with me.

“It's a drill I've been doing forever. I stick my left glove in my left armpit, swing, and that's the most basic thing I could be doing, but it's been working, so I'm just going to keep doing that and just worry about hitting my shots.”

Why change?

And Morikawa isn't about to change his approach on the weekend no matter how big a lead he has.

“If I get ahead of myself, that's when bad things are going to happen, so I've got to look, see what my game plan has been the past two days and stick to that,” said Morikawa, who won the 2019 Barracuda Championsh­ip in just his sixth start as a pro. “Whether I have the lead or not, I've got to go into the weekend feeling like I've got to make the same (number) of birdies I have been the past two days.

“I feel like there's a lot of birdies out there for me especially, the way I've been hitting it, so I've just got to keep that up, play smart, like I said, and attack pins when it's available for me.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Collin Morikawa hits a drive on the second hole during the second round of the Workday Charity Open on Friday. Morikawa is the leader in the clubhouse after two rounds.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Collin Morikawa hits a drive on the second hole during the second round of the Workday Charity Open on Friday. Morikawa is the leader in the clubhouse after two rounds.

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