The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Simpson takes 1-shot lead; Watney first to test positive

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Webb Simpson spent two days at Harbour Town watching bulked-up Bryson DeChambeau swing out of his shoes and realized his own brand of golf works just fine.

They traded birdies Friday morning in the RBC Heritage until Simpson got the last word with a 6-footer on his final hole for a 6-under 65 and a one-shot lead over DeChambeau and Corey Conners after two rounds.

DeChambeau made six birdies on his final nine holes, missing a 5-footer on No. 9 for a 64. Conners had a bogey-free 63.

“It’s very satisfying knowing I’m not near as long as some of these guys and I’m able to kind of use my skills of distance control and shot shape to pick me back up when I’m 40 yards or 30 yards behind these guys,” Simpson said.

“I would like to hit it further,” he said. “I set out on a journey three years ago to get stronger, hit it further, but do it a lot slower than Bryson. But he’s made it look easy and seamless.”

Simpson was at 12-under 130 on a Harbour Town course that is yielding low scores with relatively soft conditions and moderate wind.

DeChambeau stands out like the lighthouse behind the 18th green.

He decided at the end of last season to get stronger and bigger so he could swing faster and hit it longer, and the transforma­tion has everyone’s attention. Even while adding 40 pounds of mass, he hasn’t lost his love for science. That was evident on his final hole.

DeChambeau had the honors and let Simpson go first so he could figure out what to do. Simpson poked his hybrid 221 yards down the fairway on the 334-yard ninth hole. DeChambeau opted for a 3-wood, mainly because he feared his driver would go well over the green.

He took two violent practice swings and huffed out breath like an Olympic weightlift­er preparing for the clean and jerk. He sent it soaring only to say, “Ah! Too much spin, dang it.”

It found a bunker in front of the green, 309 yards away, and he was far more bothered missing the short birdie putt, even though his 64 left him right in the mix again.

He hasn’t finished worse than a tie for fifth since February — only four tournament­s because of the three-month pandemic shut down.

Watney first PGA Tour player to test positive: Five-time PGA Tour winner Nick Watney tested positive Friday for the coronaviru­s, the first player with a confirmed infection since golf resumed its schedule last week.

Watney withdrew from the RBC Heritage and must self-isolate for at least 10 days under the PGA Tour’s protocols. He did not return a telephone call seeking comment. Watney played the opening round with Vaughn Taylor and Luke List.

Watney missed the cut last week in Fort Worth, Texas. He traveled on his own to South Carolina, and his coronaviru­s test upon arrival at Harbour Town was negative.

Before arriving to the course for his second round, he reported symptoms consistent with COVID19. Watney was tested again, and the result came back positive.

 ?? GERRY BROOME / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Webb Simpson led at 12-under 130 after Friday’s second round on a Harbour Town course that is yielding low scores with relatively soft conditions and moderate wind in Hilton Head Island, S.C.
GERRY BROOME / ASSOCIATED PRESS Webb Simpson led at 12-under 130 after Friday’s second round on a Harbour Town course that is yielding low scores with relatively soft conditions and moderate wind in Hilton Head Island, S.C.

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