San Antonio Express-News

Kuchar cruises on island time, grabs lead

- By Doug Ferguson

HONOLULU — The easygoing vibe in Hawaii is a perfect fit for Matt Kuchar, who spends as much as a month at a time on the islands when his schedule allows.

The Sony Open is more about work than play, but he’s having just as much fun. Kuchar ran off four birdies in five holes to start his second round Friday, handled the par 5s at Waialae again and finished with another round of 7-under 63 to take a one-shot lead over Andrew Putnam.

“To shoot 7 under back-toback is unexpected, but awfully excited,” Kuchar said.

Kuchar was at 14-under 126, matching the lowest 36-hole score of his PGA Tour career. He also had a 126 in Las Vegas in 2008.

Putnam, playing in the afternoon, had a bogey-free 65 and was one shot behind. Chez Reavie (65) and Stewart Cink (62) were four behind.

Jordan Spieth had a short week after a long break from golf. In his 2019 debut, Spieth had a 66 and missed the cut by one shot. Needing to birdie the last four holes to qualify for the weekend, Spieth ran off two birdies, missed a 10-foot birdie putt and then narrowly missed chipping in for eagle.

“I loved the fight,” Spieth said. “I feel like I was trying to win the tournament trying to make the cut, which is not something I want to get used to.”

He returns in two weeks at Torrey Pines.

No one had a more memorable round than Reavie. He holed out for eagle three times from the fairway — a sand wedge from 101 yards on No. 10 at the start of his round; a 9-iron from 149 yards on No. 16, and a gap wedge from 135 yards on No. 6. The PGA Tour began keeping hole-by-hole records in 1983, and no one had made three eagles in one round on par 4s since. Reavie didn’t think all that much about it until he piped a drive on No. 8 and hit a wedge that covered the flag.

“It was on a good line, and that was the only time it crossed my mind — ‘Wow, could we make another one?’ ” he said. “The other two, I just hit the shot I was trying to see and it was going at the hole. Never expected it to go in. It’s always a surprise when it disappears.”

So odd was this round that Reavie made more eagles than birdies, and the one shot that made him think the ball might go in the hole led to a par.

“Apparently, I need to go buy a lottery ticket today,” Reavie said.

Cink made nine birdies in his round of 62. Marc Leishman (64) and Ted Potter Jr. (65) were at 9-under 131

Keith Mitchell had a hole-inone on the seventh hole with an 8-iron from 176 yards.

Of the five players over 50 in the field, Steve Stricker and Davis Love III made the cut. Stricker holed a 55-foot eagle putt on his final hole to make it on the number.

 ?? Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images ?? Matt Kuchar carded a second-round 7-under-par 63 to take a one-shot lead over Andrew Putnam at Waialae Country Club.
Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images Matt Kuchar carded a second-round 7-under-par 63 to take a one-shot lead over Andrew Putnam at Waialae Country Club.

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