Defending champion Matsuyama one stroke from Phoenix lead
Send a link to a friend
[February 04, 2017]
(Reuters) - Reigning champion
Hideki Matsuyama recorded his first bogey of the week on his final
hole on Friday but remains the man to beat at the Phoenix Open in
Arizona as he heads into the weekend just one stroke off the lead.
The 24-year-old Japanese, the game's hottest player over the past
four months with four wins and two runner-up results in his last
eight starts, fired a three-under-par 68 at the TPC Scottsdale.
American Brendan Steele (67) and South Korean An Byeong-hun, who
drained a 35-foot birdie putt at the par-four 18th to card a 66,
shared the lead on 10-under 132.
"It was a good putt, perfect speed," An told Golf Channel about his
sixth birdie of the day, and his third in the last four holes. "I
hit it a bit harder than I wanted but it just caught the right lip
and went in.
"I was hitting it well today," said the 25-year-old, whose best PGA
Tour finish was a runner-up spot at the 2016 Zurich Classic of New
Orleans. "Last week (at the Farmers Insurance Open) I was a bit
shaky but Sunday I played really well, especially on the back nine.
"I was hitting some great shots, and now I have the confidence
going." Matsuyama, who beat American Rickie Fowler in a playoff to
win last year's Phoenix Open, recorded four birdies in his first 17
holes before bunkering his approach into 18, splashing out to six
feet and narrowly missing the par putt. His first bogey of the
tournament dropped him into a tie for third with Scotland's Martin
Laird (66), American Matt Kuchar (69) and South Korea's Kang
Sung-hoon (65).
"I played good, steady golf today," said overnight leader Kuchar,
who had opened with a 64. "Two under doesn't keep up with
yesterday's round but it's hard to keep up with a seven-under-par
score."
[to top of second column] |
Hideki Matsuyama plays his tee shot on the 13th during the first
round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open golf tournament at TPC
Scottsdale. Mandatory Credit: Allan Henry-USA TODAY Sports
World number six Jordan Spieth got to six under for the round after
13 holes but ran up a double-bogey at the 18th, after hitting his
tee shot into water, to card a 68.
"Eighteen was rough," said Spieth, who ended the day at four-under,
level with fellow American Phil Mickelson (70).
"We (he and caddie Michael Greller) discussed and I had Michael's
confidence that if you hit it solid, for sure, it's going to carry
that water.
"I smashed it and it still didn't carry, so that was a kind of a
bugaboo on our part."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in St. Augustine, Florida; Editing
by Andrew Both)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|