The Arizona Republic

Casey, 3 others tied for lead at Erin Hills

- STEVE DIMEGLIO

ERIN, Wis. - Erin Hills took it on the chin once again.

For the second consecutiv­e day, the massive layout was at the mercy of the best golfers in the world, who took turns battering par and the course in the second round of the U.S. Open.

With soft winds gently flowing above Erin Hills on Friday, and the fairways and greens still a tad soft after storms earlier in the week, the toughest test in golf is looking more and more

like the former birdie-fest that was the Greater Milwaukee Open.

“It was still gettable,” said Charley Hoffman, who has posted 70-70 and is three shots out of the lead. “For the most part the wind was nonexisten­t. There was a slight breeze out there and the greens were receptive if you were in the fairway. You can still make birdies out there.

“If you hit it in the fairway you can attack the golf course.”

Typically par is your friend in the U.S. Open. This week, so far, you’ve had to make birdies your friends, even if the course is playing 7,800-plus yards. With wind a non-factor, a red-number logjam emerged on the first page of the leaderboar­d with two rounds to play in the second major of the season.

Four players — Paul Casey (71), Brian Harman (70), Tommy Fleetwood (70) and Brooks Koepka (70) — are tied for the lead at 7 under.

Casey made a snowman — a triple-bogey 8 on the par-5 14th — and still broke par with a 71. Helps that he made five consecutiv­e birdies, just one short of the tournament record held by three players, including Adam Hadwin, who made six straight birds in Thursday’s first round.

“Not every day you enjoy a round of golf with an 8 on the card, but I'm a pretty happy man,” Casey said. “Yeah, it was a bit of a roller coaster.”

Three players are a shot back — Jamie Lovemark (69), first-round leader Rickie Fowler (73) and J.B. Holmes (69). Five players are at 5 under — Si Woo Kim (70), Xander Schauffele (73), amateur Cameron Champ (69), Brandt Snedeker (69) and Hideki Matsuyama, who tied for the low round of the day with a 7-underpar 65.

Six players are at 4 under, including Chez Reavie, the other player to shoot 65.

In all, 23 players are within four shots of the lead.

And a day after 44 players finished under par to set the record for most sub-par rounds in the first round, 46 players signed for a sub-par round. That fell one short of the record for most sub-par rounds in the second round, when 47 players broke par in 1990 at Medinah Country Club.

Of the 68 players who made the cut, 42 are under par.

The cut came at 1 over, which tied the record for lowest cut in tournament history, in relation to par, also establishe­d in 1990.

Despite all the good scoring, the world’s top 3 players missed the cut — defending champion and No. 1 Dustin Johnson (75-73), No. 2 Rory McIlroy (78-71) and No. 3 Jason Day (79-75). It is the first time since the introducti­on of the official world rankings in 1986 that the top 3 players in the world missed the cut in the same major championsh­ip.

“If you look at the golf course and you talk to me, Jason or Rory, this course sets up perfect for us. But as we all know, this game's all about putting,” Johnson said. “So it's pretty simple, I just didn't get it in the hole fast enough.”

There’s plenty of golf left to be played and Mother Nature will dictate what the course will tee up. The forecast calls for overnight showers and scattered thundersto­rms throughout Saturday. If the course gets more water, it will be hard pressed to play fast and firm and tougher. If the storms stay away, Erin Hills could become a nasty beast.

LPGA Tour

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. - Brooke Henderson bogeyed the final two holes for a 4-under 67, leaving the 19-year-old Canadian with a two-stroke lead in the Meijer LPGA Classic.

Fellow major champion Lexi Thompson, coming off a playoff loss to Ariya Jutanugarn on Sunday in Canada, followed her opening 64 with a 68 to join Carlota Ciganda (64) and Mi Jung Hur (66) at 10 under.

 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Brian Harman plays his shot from the first tee during the second round of the U.S. Open at Erin Hills on Friday in Erin, Wis.
ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY SPORTS Brian Harman plays his shot from the first tee during the second round of the U.S. Open at Erin Hills on Friday in Erin, Wis.

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