Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Morikawa surges at Workday

Beats storms to lead by 3 after two rounds

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Among the lessons Collin Morikawa took away from missing his first cut as a pro was that his reliable cut shot had left him. He found at it Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio, and it sent him to a threeshot lead going into the weekend at the Workday Charity Open.

Morikawa ran off four consecutiv­e birdies after making the turn Friday, finished with another birdie after the first of two storm delays and shot 6-under 66.

He was six shots ahead when he finished. He was four shots ahead over Sam Burns when his side of the field finished. And it was down to three after some remarkable play by Justin Thomas (66) and Kevin Streelman (64) in surprising­ly strong gusts that followed the storm.

Morikawa was at 13-under 131, one shot off the 36-hole course record set by Jason Dufner in 2017 at the Memorial.

Thomas hasn’t made a bogey all week and finished his round with an 8-foot birdie putt. Streelman reached 11 under until a bogey on the par-3 eighth near the end of his round. They will be in the final group Saturday, which will be played in threesomes because of two 75-minute delays from thundersto­rms that prevented the second round from finishing.

That means Brooks Koepka has to wait to see if his big finish paid off.

Starting with a near ace on the 12th hole, Koepka birdied five of his final seven holes, closing with a 40-foot birdie putt for a 69. That put him at 1-under 143, and he left in a tie for 68th with more than 30 players unable to finish.

“That’s what you’ve got to do. I never give up, never think you’re out of it, and you’ve just got to battle through it no matter what you’re doing,” Koepka said.

The top 65 and ties advance and, with morning conditions, the cut was likely to stay at 2 under. Koepka signed his card and then decided to play the Memorial next week. He is out of the top 150 in the FedEx Cup with five tournament­s left.

Sam Burns birdied his final three holes for a 66 and joined past Muirfield Village winner Hideki Matsuyama (68) four shots behind. Right behind was Viktor Hovland, who took advantage of the tee being moved up on the par-4 14th. His tee shot nearly went in and he settled for a tap-in eagle on his way to a 67.

Morikawa, with 15 birdies and an eagle through two rounds, is making his debut at the course Jack Nicklaus built, and perhaps it’s no coincidenc­e that Nicklaus was famous for hitting a cut.

“I had heard from a lot of people before, this course was going to suit a left-to-right shot, anyway,” Morikawa said. “Obviously, Jack hit that, and I think it does. But I’ve been able to leave myself some really good numbers into approach shots. I’ve been keeping myself in the fairway for the most part, and that obviously helps.”

Phil Mickelson had another exciting day, minus the meltdown at the end of his round. He opened by chipping in for birdie and making a 12-foot eagle putt. With the tee moved forward on the 14th hole, the par 4 guarded by a pond right of the green, he hit driver to 10 feet and had to settle for birdie.

Spaniard is timeless

Spaniard Miguel Angel Jiménez, 56, moved into position to break his record as the oldest winner of a European Tour event when he shot 7-under 65 to take the second-round lead in the Austrian Open in Atzenbrugg. Jiménez made nine birdies in his first 13 holes, before rebounding from bogeys at Nos. 16 and 17 with a birdie-2 at the last at Diamond Country Club outside Vienna. He was 11 under, two shots clear of five players: Joost Luiten (70), Marc Warren (69), Craig Howie (69), Renato Paratore (67) and Nicolai von Dellingsha­usen (67). Jiménez was 50 years, 133 days when he won the Open de España in 2014 to become the oldest winner on the tour.

 ?? Sam Greenwood/Getty Images ?? Collin Morikawa was one shot off the 36-hole course record set by Jason Dufner in 2017 at the Memorial.
Sam Greenwood/Getty Images Collin Morikawa was one shot off the 36-hole course record set by Jason Dufner in 2017 at the Memorial.
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