The Borneo Post (Sabah)

DeChambeau’s 64 edges Poulter, Kim for PGA Heritage lead

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WASHINGTON, United States: American Bryson DeChambeau fired a seven-under-par 64 Friday to seize a one-stroke lead over Britain’s Ian Poulter and South Korean Kim Si-woo at the US PGA Heritage tournament.

DeChambeau, who won his first PGA title at last year’s John Deere Classic, stood on 10-under 132 after 36 holes at Hilton Head, South Carolina, in the traditiona­l return to tour golf after last week’s Masters.

After sharing 38th last week at Augusta National, DeChambeau opened on 68 and followed with another low-scoring round, making birdies on four of the last six holes.

DeChambeau reached the green in two at the par-5 second and holed a 10-foot eagle putt, but never found the fairway in making bogey at the third. He answered with back-toback birdies on 3-foot putts at the par-5 fifth and par-4 sixth, then added another at the eighth before a lost ball off the ninth tee led to another bogey.

Closing with a flourish, DeChambeau birdied 13, the par5 15th, 16 and the par-3 17th on a 12-foot putt to grab the lead. After finding a bunker at 18, he sank a testy 12-footer for par to keep the second-round lead.

Kim began on the back nine and birdied 13 from 18 feet, then suffered a triple-bogey at the par-3 14th. He was imposed a two-shot penalty for touching sand with his hand in a bunker while thinking he was on the greenside fringe.

“This might be the first time I played so well with a triple bogey,” Kim said through a translator. “I think that made me play more aggressive­ly so I’m very happy with my round.”

Kim answered with birdies on his next three holes, an eight-footer at 15, a four-footer at 16 and a tap-in at the par-3 17th.

He then opened the front nine, his second nine of the round, with three consecutiv­e birdies -- a 25-foot putt at one, a four-footer at two and a bomb from 43 feet at the third.

Kim then birdied the par-5 fifth from three feet and closed on birdie at the ninth, blasting from a greenside bunker off the tee to six feet and making the putt for a 65.

“I had a really good run,” Kim said. “I was happy with how I played.”

Poulter felt much the same after shooting a bogey-free 64 in his sixth consecutiv­e week of golf after winning the Houston Open two weeks ago to qualify for the Masters.

“It’s nice. If you keep bogeys off your card you’re generally going to have a good round. You have to be on your game,” Poulter said.

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