Johnson in U.S. Open command after second round 67
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[June 16, 2018]
By Andrew Both
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (Reuters) - Dustin
Johnson moved closer to a second U.S. Open victory in three years,
shrugging off the worst of the conditions to take a stranglehold on
the U.S. Open with a four-shot second-round lead at Shinnecock Hills
on Friday.
The overnight joint leader jumped clear with an assured
three-under-par 67 on a day when the tournament lost considerable
star wattage as Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods missed
the cut.
"Today was really solid in some tough conditions," Johnson said
after posting a four-under 136 halfway total to head fellow
Americans Charley Hoffman (69) and Scott Piercy (71).
A high-powered group of five stood next at one-over -- defending
champion Brooks Koepka, fellow major winners Justin Rose and Henrik
Stenson, plus Englishmen Tommy Fleetwood and Ian Poulter
The straight-talking Poulter got within one shot of Johnson before
running up a triple-bogey at his 17th hole, the par-four eighth,
where he got too aggressive with a bunker shot.
He nipped his ball too cleanly, air-mailing the green before
compounded his problems by fluffing his next shot from a gnarly lie.
"I felt stupid knifing the first one (the bunker shot). I felt even
more stupid semi-chunking the next one, and I didn't do much better
on the next one either," said the always-quotable Poulter.
World number one Johnson endured no similar drama, largely by
adopting a conservative strategy and taking few risks.
He capped off the day at his 16th hole, the par-three seventh, where
he curled in a 45-foot birdie putt that trundled downhill before
trickling in as fellow competitor Woods looked on with admiration
and perhaps a tinge of envy.
"Dustin was in complete control of what he's doing. He's hitting the
ball so flush and so solid," Woods said.
"And he's got beautiful speed on the greens. Every putt looked like
it was going to go in."
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Dustin Johnson tees off the tenth hole during the second round of
the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills GC - Shinnecock
Hills Golf C. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports
After strong winds sent scores soaring on Thursday, the breeze
abated slightly but still blew strongly enough in the morning to
make for a difficult test, with a light mid-morning rain making
playing conditions miserable for an hour or so.
It was much easier in the afternoon, as the skies cleared, the wind
all but died and the late starters charged onto the leaderboard,
albeit still some distance adrift of Johnson.
"With the rain coming down and it was cooler, the golf ball was
going nowhere. The course played really long," said Johnson, a
prodigiously-long hitter whose definition of "nowhere" is different
to most.
The 2016 champion said he would stay with what got him a four-shot
lead, namely taking his medicine after the inevitable bad tee shot.
"I'm going to stick to my game plan, stick to trying to play the
holes how I have the first couple of days and see what happens.
"I'm just trying to get it back in play and then give myself just a
look at par ... limit the mistakes, especially limit the big
numbers.
"I feel like, if I can get a look at par and not make any doubles,
I'm going to make a couple birdies.
"I know I'm playing well, so as long as I can do that, then I'm
going to shoot a pretty good score."
Sixty-seven players made the cut, which fell at eight-over 148.
(Reporting by Andrew Both; editing by David Stamp and Ian
Chadband/Gene Cherry)
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