Lethbridge Herald

Casey shares early lead at Innisbrook

-

Paul Casey drove into Innisbrook and saw his picture on posters and programs, just what he needed to forget the cut he missed last week.

He played Friday as though he wants those photos to stay here.

Casey holed a 30-foot eagle putt on the 599yard fifth hole and made short birdie putts on the other three par 5s on his way to a 5-under 66, giving him a share of the lead with Austin Cook among the early starters Friday in the Valspar Championsh­ip.

No one has ever won back-to-back at the Valspar Championsh­ip since it became a PGA Tour event in 2000.

“I’ve never defended a profession­al event. I would love to do that,” Casey said. “Mentally last year I was hoping I would win, wanting to win. This year, knowing that I have won around here, I have a slightly different approach to it, and I played today quite aggressive­ly and tried to take advantage of the golf course that I knew was going to get very, very tough this afternoon.”

Casey and Cook, who shot a 67, were at 6-under 136.

Scott Stallings (68) and Sungjae Im (67) were one shot behind, while Dustin Johnson overcame a rough patch early in his round with five birdies on the front nine to salvage a 69. Johnson, the No. 1 player in the world, was two shots behind on a Copperhead course he hasn’t seen in nine years.

Joel Dahmen and Sepp Straka, who shared the 18-hole lead at 5 under, were among those playing in the afternoon.

Casey last year ended eight years without winning on the PGA Tour when he closed with a 65 and had to wait to see if Tiger Woods and Patrick Reed could catch him. It was the centerpiec­e of a resurgence for Casey, a 41-yearold from England who is back among the top 15 in the world ranking.

He opened in the morning calm with a 10-foot birdie putt and did the rest of his damage on the par 5s. The eagle putt followed a blind shot over a hill on the longest hole at Innisbrook. He went bunker-to-bunker on his final hole at No. 9 and made bogey to slip into a tie with Cook.

“Everybody is going to make bogeys. If you can just minimize those, it puts you in a good position,” Casey said.

He spent the opening two rounds with Johnson, who had to maximize his birdies after his start. Johnson thought he might have had too much club on the par-3 13th and was stunned to learn that it had come up short enough to catch the slope and roll down toward the water, leading to double bogey.

On the next hole, a par 5 where he had to lay up from the rough, Johnson had a 104-yard wedge for his third shot that travelled only about 50 yards. There was a reason for that.

“As soon as he hit it, he said, ‘Just don’t go in a divot,’” said Austin Johnson, his brother and caddie. It found a divot. “It was big,” Johnson said, holding his hands about a foot part, which might have been a slight exaggerati­on. “I mean, it was long. It was deep. It wasn’t ... I don’t think it was from a profession­al.”

He managed to get that up-and-down by making a 5-footer to avoid losing another shot. Johnson started the front nine with four birdies in five holes, including one birdie putt from 35 feet on No. 3, and is back in the game.

Gary Woodland also played with them and three-putted from 7 feet for double bogey on his last hole for a 71 that was almost certain to miss the cut. Woodland had the longest active cut

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada