Albuquerque Journal

Harman matches British Open records

American has 5-shot lead over Fleetwood

- BY DOUG FERGUSON

HOYLAKE, England — Brian Harman found himself in elite company through two rounds at Royal Liverpool, tying the 36-hole record also held by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy. Even better was having no company at all atop the leaderboar­d Friday in the British Open.

Harman seized control early with four straight birdies, and saved his best for the final hole. He ripped a 5-iron to 15 feet for eagle, giving him a 6-under 65 that gave him a five-shot lead over Tommy Fleetwood going into the weekend.

Not since Scottie Scheffler at the 2021 Masters has a player led by five shots through 36 holes. The last player to lead the British Open by five shots at the halfway point was Louis Oosthuizen at St. Andrews in 2010. Both went on to win handily.

“I understand a lot can happen at an Open, but eight shots is a lot of shots to spot a player who’s playing really well,” said Jordan Spieth, who lost three shots on the back nine for a 71 that left him eight behind. “But I think we’ll just have to look at what Brian will do. He’s in control now. It’s on him.”

McIlroy had even more ground to make up. He figured a round in the 60s would have put him right back in the mix. He lost his spark around the turn and only a birdie at the par-5 18th allowed him to break par with a 70. He was nine shots behind in his quest to end nine years without a major.

Harman’s 65 matched the lowest score for Royal Liverpool, which is hosting the Open for the 13th time. He was at 10-under 132, the same score Woods in 2006 and McIlroy in 2014 had when they went on to win the claret jug.

Harman cared only about a little food, a little sleep and not thinking about much more.

The key to Saturday might be to stay dry with rain in the forecast.

Sepp Straka had six birdies over his last seven holes — the other was a bogey — for a 31 on the back nine that gave him a 67. He was alone in third place, six shots behind Harman.

Fleetwood made back-to-back birdies on the back nine to get within four shots of Harman, only to find a bunker to the left of the 16th fairway. He could only splash out and had to hit a superb pitch to save bogey. He scrambled for par on the final two holes for his 71.

Fleetwood, who grew up about 45 minutes away in Southport, had massive support from the gallery in the northwest of England.

“Brian had two amazing days,” Fleetwood said. “He’s a long way in front. Of course there’s a long way to go.”

The course remained tough, even though the R&A chose to rake sand in the bunker toward the edges to keep golf balls from rolling next to the edges of the steep, vetted sides. Such situations led to big numbers in the opening round.

“It played tough — it played really, really tough,” McIlroy said. “Ten-under par is unbelievab­ly impressive out there. We’ll see what the weekend holds. But after two days I’m actually pretty happy with my two days’ work.” At least he has two more days. Dustin Johnson shot an 82, his worst score in a major since the final round at Pebble Beach that cost him a chance in the 2010 U.S. Open. Justin Thomas rebounded from his 82 with a 71 that was all about momentum — he is playing next week in Minnesota as he tries to qualify for the PGA Tour’s postseason.

Over the final hour, the only drama was who would survive the cut at 3-over 145.

Scottie Scheffler, the world’s No. 1 player who has not finished worse than 12th this year, delivered a clutch moment when he got up-and-down from a bunker on the par-5 18th for birdie. That gave him a 74 to make the cut on the number. Defending champion Cameron Smith eagled the 18th to make the cut.

“I think the scorecard is a long way off how the game feels,” Smith said. “It’s been a frustratin­g couple of days.”

That’s what made Harman’s round so impressive. A pint-sized lefty with Georgia grit, Harman has done the best at keeping the ball in play and he has made only one bogey through 36 holes.

 ?? JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The United States’ Brian Harman speaks at a press conference following the completion of his second round at the British Open at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England on Friday.
JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States’ Brian Harman speaks at a press conference following the completion of his second round at the British Open at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England on Friday.
 ?? JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy plays from the rough to the seventh green during the second day of the Open Championsh­ip on Friday.
JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy plays from the rough to the seventh green during the second day of the Open Championsh­ip on Friday.

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