The Oklahoman

ANCER THE CALL

Former Sooner climbs into tie atop leaderboar­d after two rounds at Augusta National

- By David Westin

Abraham Ancer was already fired up about playing in his first Masters Tournament this week. When he watched his friend and fellow Mexican Carlos Ortiz win the Houston Open last Sunday, his enthusiasm went to another level.

Ancer has carried that over into the tournament, where he has shot 68-67 and is at 9- under 1 3 5 . The f or mer Oklahoma golfer was ti ed for the lead among those who finished 36 holes on Friday.

The second round was suspended by darkness with 48 players yet to complete the second round. That will happen Saturday morning, but no matter what happens, Ancer will be among the top players heading into the weekend.

An ce rh ad arrived at Augusta National on Nov. 5 in order to get become comfortabl­e with the course. He was in the locker room on Sunday when Ortiz was in the mix to end a 42-year drought without a victory by a Mexican- born player on the PGA Tour.

“I was going t o go play the back nine, but I was like,

'I've got to go watch my boy win this thing ,'” An ce rs aid .“I' ve never been that nervous watching somebody else play. I was actually freaking out there a little bit. So that was really cool to watch. It was awesome. I got pumped up. That day, I ended up practicing until dark here. I was really excited, and motivated me, too.”

An c er, whoqu alifi ed for the Masters by making it to the 2019 Tour Championsh­ip and being inside the top 50 in the world (he's now 21st), gained valuable experience last December in Australia as an internatio­nal team player in the Presidents Cup. Ancer, a rookie, went 3-1-1, losing

only his singles match to Tiger Woods.

“I've always said that experience in Melbourne definitely prepared me or helped me feel a lot more comfortabl­e, really, in any scenario I get put on or whoever I' m playing with or whatever tournament it is,” Ancer said. “I mean, the amount of pressure that you feel there, the excitement, every putt counts so much. That whole week was big for me and my career.”

Ancer was 9-under par for the 25 holes he played on Friday. He had to stop his first round on Thursday on a disappoint­ing note, three-putting No. 11 for bogey.

“So I was a little bit mad about that, so we got called off, and so I had to be really patient and know that … I mean, there's no reason … it's not going to help me if I'm going to be mad and

coming back and thinking about that.”

On Friday morning, Ancer had to restart his round on the devilish par-3 12th hole. He hit the green and two-putted for par.

“I felt good, I knew what my number would be so I hit some 9-irons on the range,” he said.

“It's a challengin­g tee shot coming back and starting on 12, but I managed to hit the green and two-putt, and from there it was really nice, smooth sailing.”

After t he par on No. 12, Ancer played his final six holes to complete his first round in 4- under par, striking for making birdies on Nos. 13, 14, 15 and 18, giving him six for the round. In his afternoon round of 67, he had six more birdies to offset a bogey on No. 10 to start his round, including birdies on three par 3s.

 ?? [ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY SPORTS] ?? Former OU golfer Abraham Ancer watches his shot on the third tee Friday during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National. Ancer shot a 5-under 67 Friday to pull into a first-place tie.
[ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY SPORTS] Former OU golfer Abraham Ancer watches his shot on the third tee Friday during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National. Ancer shot a 5-under 67 Friday to pull into a first-place tie.
 ??  ?? Abraham Ancer watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the second round Friday in Augusta, Ga. [AP PHOTO/CHRIS CARLSON]
Abraham Ancer watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the second round Friday in Augusta, Ga. [AP PHOTO/CHRIS CARLSON]

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