Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

DeChambeau flirts with 58, 59

Settles for 60 in Round 2 of BMW

- By Doug Ferguson

OWINGS MILLS, Md. — Big, wide and soft Caves Valley didn’t stand a chance against Bryson DeChambeau Friday in the BMW Championsh­ip. Only the record book did.

DeChambeau overpowere­d the vulnerable course, and when his 8-iron to the par-5 16th rolled off a bank on the back of the green down to 2 feet for eagle, he needed two birdies on the final two holes to tie the PGA Tour record of 58.

He missed from 15 feet on the 17th. He missed a 6-foot putt on the 18th hole and lost his bid at the 13th sub-60 round in PGA Tour history.

DeChambeau had to settle for a career-best 60, giving him a one-shot lead over Patrick Cantlay when thundersto­rms caused the second round to be delayed.

“A lot of putts went in. A lot of things went right,” DeChambeau told broadcast outlets. “I played my butt off and never thought too much about anything until the last few holes, and I striped a 9iron on 17, striped a drive, striped a wedge on 18.

“And just wasn’t able to clutch those putts up.”

It was the second week in a row in the PGA Tour postseason that a player had a putt to break 60 on the final hole. Cameron Smith missed from 12 feet at Liberty National in the third round last week. DeChambeau had an even better look than that.

His wedge landed some 25 feet beyond the flag and the spin caused it to zip back toward the hole, 6 feet below the cup. The putt was wide left all the way. DeChambeau snapped his fingers, tapped in for par and then returned to the spot for a practice stroke, trying to figure out what went wrong. Little else did. DeChambeau was at 16under 128.

Cantlay, who had one of the great putting rounds of his career Thursday, was equally strong in a round of 63 that was largely overlooked. He played in the group behind DeChambeau and played a classic style of golf that resulted in 10 birdies until his lone bogey from a tough lie in the collar of rough around the par-3 17th green.

DeChambeau stuck to his practice of not speaking to the press, only the PGA Tour broadcast partners. That presumably stems from three weeks ago when he said he wasn’t vaccinated, saying, “I’m young enough. I’d rather give it to the people who need it.”

It hasn’t been the smoothest year for DeChambeau.

He had to miss the Olympics because of a positive COVID-19 test, and that followed a petty war of words with Brooks Koepka played out largely over social media. DeChambeau has heard “Brooksy” from so many hecklers that he has asked local security to remove fans.

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