Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Oh, so close

Hughes finishes 2 shots off Furyk’s 18-hole tour record on same course

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Unheralded Canadian flirts with sub-60 round in Travelers.

CROMWELL, Conn. — Canadian Mackenzie Hughes shot a career-low 60 Thursday to take the lead after the first round of the Travelers Championsh­ip as the PGA Tour tried to switch its focus back to golf amid growing concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic.

Hughes, 29, had a chance to shoot the 12th sub-60 round in PGA Tour history, but his 40-foot birdie attempt on his final hole came up short. Jim Furyk shot a 12-under 58 on the same TPC River Highlands course four years ago, the lowest score in a tour event.

“I kind of joked walking off there that 59 wasn’t even the record because of Jim’s 58,” Hughes said. “It’s probably not even that special around here. But, as a personal milestone, it would have been neat.”

It was good enough for a three-shot lead over Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Viktor Hovland.

Phil Mickelson, paired with McIlroy in his first competitiv­e round since turning 50, was one of six players to shoot 64. Bryson DeChambeau’s 65 was the worst score in the marquee threesome on a day when 106 players broke par. The record for a day at TPC River Highlands was in 2011, when 111 players were 1under or better in the second round.

Hughes’ bogey-free round included a 30-foot birdie putt on his second-to-last hole, the par-3 eighth. Patrick Cantlay was the last to shoot 60 at TPC River Highlands as an amateur in 2011.

McIlroy, who also started on the back nine, eagled the par-5 13th and followed that with two birdies. He made four more birdies on the front nine for a 31.

Schauffele and Hovland were the best in the afternoon. Schauffele was 8 under through 16 holes but missed a 7-footer for par on the 17th. Hovland made a sloppy bogey on 17 but rebounded with a wedge to 4 feet on the par-4 18th for birdie.

Abraham Ancer, the runner-up at the RBC Heritage last week, aced the 155yard 16th.

“It was very anticlimac­tic because there was nobody out there and we couldn’t high-five or anything, but still, it was awesome to have my first PGA Tour ace,” said Ancer, who shot 67.

The run-up to the tournament was consumed by news about the coronaviru­s and questions about how long the tour can continue after two players — Nick Watney and Cameron Champ — and the caddies for Brooks Koepka and Graeme McDowell tested positive. Those were the only four positive tests of the 1,382 conducted by the tour since its return.

Players who test positive are required to withdraw. Koepka, his brother Chase, McDowell and last week’s winner, Webb Simpson, withdrew because of concerns about the virus. The Travelers is the third event on the tour calendar since golf resumed.

The withdrawal­s opened the door for alternates including Tyler McCumber, who arrived Wednesday night from his home in Florida and shot 65.

McCumber missed the cut on the Korn Ferry Tour last week and then went camping for a few days in North Carolina’s Pisgah Forest.

“I got back Tuesday, thinking that I had no chance of getting into the tournament, and then got the call from the tour about the option of possibly getting up here,” he said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Mackenzie Hughes flirted with the 12th sub-60 round in a PGA event Thursday before settling for 60 in the first round of the Travelers Championsh­ip in Cromwell, Conn.
Associated Press Mackenzie Hughes flirted with the 12th sub-60 round in a PGA event Thursday before settling for 60 in the first round of the Travelers Championsh­ip in Cromwell, Conn.

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