Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Spieth, Reed move on

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Jordan Spieth and Patrick Reed play some of their most spirited golf against one another in the Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup, remarkable only because they’re on the same team.

Now they’re opponents. And the stakes in the Dell Technologi­es Match Play are personal.

The loser goes home.

The most intriguing match that came out of the draw at the start of the week was packed with significan­ce Thursday when Spieth and Reed won matches for the second straight day to set up a showdown on the skirts of Hill Country in Texas.

They play Friday, one of four matches between players who have yet to lose this week at Austin Country Club.

Reed fired the first shot when asked what made Spieth a good opponent in match play.

“I don’t know. My back still hurts from the last Ryder Cup,” he said with a laugh, alluding to the way he carried Spieth in their partnershi­p at Hazeltine to a 2-1-1 record in team play during a rare American victory.

Spieth dodged trouble early against Li Haotong, who missed putts inside 8 feet on two of the opening three holes, won the second hole when Spieth hit into the hazard and thought he won the fourth hole until Spieth matched his birdie by chipping in from short of the green.

Spieth never trailed and pulled away with a savvy play on the par-4 13th over the water and into the wind. He hit driver well to the right toward the gallery, which gave him a clear look at the green without having to hit over any of the lake. His pitch-and-run settled a foot away for birdie and a 2-up lead, and Spieth closed him out, 4 and 2.

Right behind was Reed in his match against Charl Schwartzel, and the South African was 2 up at the turn until Reed won the next two holes to set up a tight finish. Schwartzel stayed 1 down when he missed a 5-foot par putt on the 17th. Needing a birdie on the 18th to halve, Schwartzel could only watch as Reed hit a wedge that nearly went in and stopped a few inches away.

Reed and Spieth are 8-1-3 as partners in the Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup. They are 1-1 in PGA Tour playoffs, with Reed hitting through the greens to short birdie range when he won the Wyndham Championsh­ip in 2013, and Spieth returning the favor in 2015 at Innisbrook by winning a playoff with a 30-foot putt.

The other three matches involving players with 2-0 record: Sergio Garcia vs. Xander Schauffele; Alex Noren vs. Tony Finau; and Justin Thomas vs. Francesco Molinari.

Noren, who has played only 30 holes, has won six of his last seven matches.

Thomas can reach No. 1 by winning this World Golf Championsh­ip because Dustin Johnson, the defending champion, was among 20 players already mathematic­ally eliminated. Johnson won seven matches last year. He has lost both his matches this year.

Others eliminated were Jon Rahm, last year’s runner-up; Zach Johnson; ex-Texas Longhorns Jhonattan Vegas and Dylan Frittelli; and Daniel Berger.

Phil Mickelson, who lost to Charles Howell III in the opening round, rallied from 4 down after eight holes and won the last three holes to beat Satoshi Kodaira, who missed putts in the 10-foot range on all of them.

PGA Tour: Tony Romo settled down after a nervous start, only to come undone on the back nine in his debut.

The former Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k played a four-hole stretch in a 5 over on the back nine that led to a 5over 77 in the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championsh­ip in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. He was 14 shots behind Brice Garnett, who had a 63 to lead by one shot.

Romo, who now works as an NFL analyst for CBS Sports, received a sponsor’s exemption to the tournament, which has one of the weaker fields of the year. He is playing as an amateur.

Garnett played bogey-free, opening with a 30 on the back nine and building a one-shot lead over Corey Conners of Canada.

LPGA Tour: Caroline Hedwall and Jackie Stoelting topped the leader board after the first round of the Kia Classic in Carlsbad, Calif.

Hedwall and Stoelting, both winless on the circuit, opened at 6-under 66.

Cristie Kerr, In-Kyung Kim, Aryia Jutanugarn and Nicole Broch Larsen were one stroke back.

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