Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Fleetwood hopes for a breakthrou­gh

Englishman trails leader Li of China by 2 after Round 2

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SAN FRANCISCO — Second at Shinnecock Hills. Second at Royal Portrush. Tommy Fleetwood finished his second round of the PGA Championsh­ip Friday at TPC Harding Park in second place, and he’s hoping that this time the wisdom he gained from being in contention at majors before will help him take that final step.

“Experience — you can’t buy it,” he said after a 6-under 64 to improve to 6 under that left him two strokes behind leader Li Haotong.

“I’ve been lucky enough to have some of that, and hopefully it stands me in good stead moving forward,” Fleetwood said. “Every time you learn. Every time these weeks come about you just hope — you prepare for it to be your week.”

Fleetwood, 29, an Englishman with five career victories on the European Tour, shot 63 on the final day of the U.S. Open in 2018 to finish one stroke behind winner Brooks Koepka. Fleetwood followed that by coming in second, six strokes behind Shane Lowry in the 2019 British Open.

Fleetwood said Friday that he didn’t just learn about himself — he also learned from watching what the winners did to close things out.

“You can class it as lucky or unlucky, but I’ve played with quite a few of the winners of the last few majors, and it’s always good to see what they do,” he said. “You’re obviously concentrat­ing on your own game, but you see how the events pan out and you see how the guys go and win those events. That in your mind can only do you good.”

Fleetwood had seven birdies and a bogey Friday to tie Cameron Champ for the lowest round of the tournament. Five others joined him at 6 under,

including Koepka, the two-time defending champion, and firstround leader Jason Day.

“You put it in the fairway around here and it makes a massive, massive difference, and I really didn’t give many shots away,” Fleetwood said. “Felt like I worked my way into the round well and then gained momentum and then kept it going.”

Fleetwood was building a bit of momentum before the coronaviru­s pandemic put everything on hold.

He finished 18th in Mexico and third at the Honda Classic, but then missed the cut at Bay Hill before the tour shut down. When it returned, Fleetwood didn’t, skipping all of June and most of July.

Fleetwood said was trying to maximize his time on the course and with his family, knowing that he wouldn’t be able to come over from Europe and go back home because of the required 14day quarantine when arriving in the United States.

“You come back and the game doesn’t feel as easy as it once did,” Fleetwood said. “Tournament golf is hard. It doesn’t matter how much golf you play with friends and family at home, when you come back — even on a scorable golf course — the margin for error is very small. And you get used to that when you play every week.”

But the four months at home with his family — an opportunit­y he doesn’t usually have — was “amazing,” he said.

“For us, for profession­al golfers, we travel so much. I haven’t spent four months in the same bed or the same place since I was about 18,” Fleetwood said. “So that was really nice spending all the time with family. It was a reset.”

Rickie Fowler’s putt was the length of a pencil. Cameron Tringale could’ve used an eraser.

Fowler’s silly mistake — a miss from 6 inches on the sixth green — cost him a weekend starting time at the PGA Championsh­ip. Tringale’s error — signing an incorrect scorecard — saved him a couple of hours of waiting around before he headed home, as well.

They were among the 75 players to miss the cut Harding Park.

Fowler, frustrated that an online par putt got knocked off track by something on the green, pointed at the spot where the putt veered off. He then casually walked up to the ball, which wasn’t more than 6 inches from the cup, and took a stab at it. It barely moved.

“I hit the ball,” he said. “Just not hard enough.” A moment later, he knocked it in for a double-bogey-6.

It was the most painful part of a 1-under 69 that left him at 2 over, which was one shot away from the cut. at TPC

 ?? Ezra Shaw/Getty Images ?? Tommy Fleetwood is in position to win his first major at two shots back of leader Li Haotong.
Ezra Shaw/Getty Images Tommy Fleetwood is in position to win his first major at two shots back of leader Li Haotong.
 ??  ?? Saturday: Round 3, Harding Park, San Francisco. TV: 1 p.m., ESPN; 4 p.m.: KDKA.
Saturday: Round 3, Harding Park, San Francisco. TV: 1 p.m., ESPN; 4 p.m.: KDKA.

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