The Signal

Spieth not giving up just yet

PGA Championsh­ip: Jordan Spieth crawls up the leaderboar­d with hopes of winning a title at Baltusrol

- By The Associated Press

SPRINGFIEL­D, N.J. (AP) — Jordan Spieth warmed up on the range, rode the side streets in a van to get to the 10th tee and was ready to go Friday in the PGA Championsh­ip when he had to stand around for nearly an hour because of a rain delay. No matter. He still came out firing. And he hit just enough shots, and holed just enough putts, to get back into the mix at a major championsh­ip.

Spieth made three birdies in his opening four holes, along with a careless threeputt from just off the 12th green, to work his way up the leaderboar­d at Baltusrol. He wound up with a 67, the first time he had a sub-70 score in a major since the opening round of the Masters this year.

He still had plenty of work to do. At 3-under 137, he was three shots behind British Open champion Henrik Stenson after the morning wave, and in danger of falling behind Emiliano Grillo, a close friend dating to their junior golf days.

“I’m striking the ball beautifull­y,” Spieth said. “Driver went a little astray, but overall, I feel like I’m in a good position to make a run. I just need a couple good rounds.”

That’s better than his last two majors.

After squanderin­g a great opportunit­y at Augusta, where he had five-shot lead on the back nine, Spieth hasn’t had a chance in the other two majors. He was eight shots behind at Oakmont after two rounds, and he was 14 shots behind at Royal Troon going into the weekend.

Spieth finished up Thursday with two birdies in his last three holes to scratch out a 70, and he opened strong at Baltusrol on Friday, getting within one shot of the lead with back-to-back birdies on par-5 closing holes.

But it’s not where he needs it to be, especially on the greens, and occasional­ly off the tee. Spieth hit only two fairways on the back nine, and he was particular­ly wild on the third hole until a risky play — a 3-iron under the trees, with just enough pop to clear a creek. He pitched to 6 feet and saved par.

He wasn’t as fortunate on the seventh, where he took double bogey on the opening round from a wild tee shot into the trees. The ball again started out to the right, and Spieth said to himself, “I need a better break than I got yesterday.”

He missed a lot of putts, including a 12-foot birdie attempt on the par-3 ninth that caught spun out of the cup. And that remains his biggest concern.

 ??  ?? Jordan Spieth watches his tee shot on the 17th hole during the second round of the PGA Championsh­ip golf tournament at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfiel­d, N.J., Friday.
Jordan Spieth watches his tee shot on the 17th hole during the second round of the PGA Championsh­ip golf tournament at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfiel­d, N.J., Friday.

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