Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Brutal Koepka has Bethpage in awe

- Associated Press

FARMINGDAL­E (NEW YORK): The power. The putting. The poise. Brooks Koepka has it all at this PGA Championsh­ip, along with the lowest 36-hole score in Major championsh­ip history and the largest lead by anyone at the halfway point of a Grand Slam event in 85 years.

It was daunting to so many players who watched Koepka pull away to a seven-shot lead Friday at Bethpage Black.

And it looked all too familiar to Tiger Woods, who won’t be around to see the ending.

Koepka backed up his recordtyin­g 63 with a round that put him in a league of his own. He opened with three birdies in a four-hole stretch and made three birdies over the closing four holes for a 5-under 65 that broke by two shots the lowest 36-hole score—128 —in any Major. par 5, and a 9-iron into the uphill, 477-yard 15th hole.

“Relative to the field, I was about that long early in my career,” Woods said. “When you’re able to hit the ball much further than other players, and get on the right golf courses where setups like this is penalizing if you are a little bit crooked, and if he does miss it, he misses on the correct side, and he’s far enough down there to where he was able to get the ball on the green. And he did all the little things right.” That describes Woods at Bethpage Black the first time this working man’s public course hosted a major at the 2002 US Open. Woods went wire-to-wire when he was winning Majors at an alarming rate. Leaderboar­d: 128: Brooks Koepka 63-65; 135: Jordan Spieth 69-66; Adam Scott 71-64; 136: Daniel Berger 70-66; Dustin Johnson 69-67; Kelly Kraft 7165; Matt Wallace 69-67; Luke List 6868; 137: Justin Rose 70-67; 138: Danny Lee 64-74; Kang Sung 68-70; Jazz Janewattan­anond 70-68; Harold Varner 71-67; Erik Van Rooyen 70-68; Tommy Fleetwood 67-71; Louis Oosthuizen 70-68; Rickie Fowler 6969; Hideki Matsuyama 70-68

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India