Sunday Tribune

Rahm’s stunning 63 heaps pressure on leader Harman

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MASTERS champion Jon Rahm hit eight birdies in a course-record 63 to haul himself into contention for the Open Championsh­ip yesterday as overnight leader Brian Harman steadied himself after a shaky start.

With persistent rain softening up the Royal Liverpool course for a day of low scoring, Rahm picked up six shots on the back nine to surge into a share of second place.

The world number three was joined on six under par by Australia’s Jason Day and American Cameron Young, who was runner-up at last year’s British Open at St Andrews.

Rahm, 28, narrowly avoided missing the cut on Friday following rounds of 74 and 70. He bounced back in spectacula­r fashion – missing out on matching the lowest score in major championsh­ip history by a single shot.

“That’s the best round I have played on a links course ever,” said the Spaniard, who is seeking his third major.

Rahm was frustrated by the brutality of Royal Liverpool’s 82 bunkers during his first round and missed four short putts in his second as he sneaked into the weekend at two over par.

Rahm’s 63 eclipsed any round that Spanish great Seve Ballestero­s put together in his three Open triumphs.

“I’d rather win three times and never shoot 63. I hope that answers your question,” he said when asked about the comparison with his famous compatriot.

Harman, ranked 26th in the world, pulled clear of the field with a sixunder-par second round of 65 to move to 10 under.

He bogeyed two of his first four holes yesterday, but sank two birdies, at the fifth and ninth, to restore a four-shot lead.

Harman was having to cope with raucous support behind playing part-* ner Tommy Fleetwood, who hails from Southport, just 48km from Hoylake, and is aiming to become the first Englishman to lift the Claret Jug since Nick Faldo in 1992.

Fleetwood birdied the second but a bogey at the 10th dropped him back into a five-strong group at five under.

That includes Viktor Hovland, after the world number five shot a 66 to remain in contention for his first major title.

World number two Rory Mcilroy had the mass galleries following the Northern Irishman believing he could end a nine-year major drought when he picked up three shots in the opening five holes to move to four under. But he dropped back to three under with two holes to play.

World number one Scottie Scheffler will not be adding to his sole major at the 2022 Masters.

The American avoided missing the cut thanks to a birdie at the last hole on Friday, but a one-over-par round yesterday pushed him to four over for the tournament.

PGA Championsh­ip winner Brooks Koepka is also at four over after a 72.

 ?? PATRICK SMITH AFP ?? SPAIN’S Jon Rahm. |
PATRICK SMITH AFP SPAIN’S Jon Rahm. |

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