Starkville Daily News

Fitzpatric­k, Zalatoris are in Open lead

- By DOUG FERGUSON

BROOKLINE, Mass.— Eight players spent time atop the leaderboar­d, all of them getting kicked around — some worse than others — on a U.S. Open course that felt every bit like the toughest test in golf on a cool, windy afternoon at The Country Club.

Saturday was a classic U.S. Open, all about survival, a highlight reel of golf carnage.

Will Zalatoris and Matt Fitzpatric­k kept the damage to a bare minimum, giving them another crack at a major championsh­ip that is 18 holes away and feels so much longer.

Zalatoris, who lost in a playoff at the PGA Championsh­ip last month at Southern Hills, made only one bogey — a staggering feat on a beast of a Brookline course — for a 3-under 67.

“Felt like I shot a 61,” Zalatoris said. “Whenever I made a mistake I was able to get away with it or pull off something miraculous.”

Fitzpatric­k played in the final group at the PGA Championsh­ip. Now the 27-year-old from England is on familiar turf at The Country Club, where he won the U.S. Amateur in 2013. He was equally steady and ran off three birdies over his last five holes for a 68.

Most telling: They didn't make any double bogeys.

That's what knocked defending U.S. Open champion Jon Rahm out of the lead on the final hole. The Spaniard thought he had seen it all — including a shot he played back-handed from the base of a tree on the eighth hole — until he took three swipes from sand in two bunkers.

Rahm's first shot from a fairway bunker hit the lip and nearly rolled into his footprint. His next shot found a plugged lie in a greenside bunker, and two putts later he had a 71 and went from one ahead to one behind.

Rahm wasn't upset with his swing on the final hole. If anything, he said it was getting dark and he didn't notice his ball sitting down in the sand. The USGA sent the last group off at 3:45 p.m. to maximize television exposure. And maybe he tried to take on too much.

Either way, he was in no mood to look anywhere but ahead.

“I have 18 holes, and I'm only one shot back,” he said. “That's the important thing.”

Zalatoris and Fitzpatric­k were at 4-under 206, the same score of the 54-hole lead when the U.S. Open was last at The Country Club in 1988.

It's not like Rahm had full rights to the lead. This Saturday at Brookline was so wild that Rahm was the last of eight players who had at least a share of the lead at some point. Three of them didn't even finish among the top 10, including twotime major champion Collin Morikawa.

Morikawa, who shared the 36-hole lead with Joel Dahmen, had double bogeys on the seventh and 13th holes, and might have had a third after a chunked wedge on No. 4 except that he made a 25-foot putt for bogey. He finished with a 77.

Masters champion Scottie Scheffler was not immune. The world's No. 1 player looked to be pulling away when he holed a wedge from some 80 yards for eagle on the par-5 eighth.

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