Fowler, Schauffele lead U.S. Open with record 62s, Johnson in pursuit
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[June 16, 2023]
By Rory Carroll
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele shared
the lead after a record-setting start to the U.S. Open on Thursday
while Dustin Johnson and Rory McIlroy faltered late in a low-scoring
day at the Los Angeles Country Club.
Fowler and world number six Schauffele fired matching
eight-under-par 62s that marked the lowest round in U.S. Open
history and equalled the lowest major round of all time.
A resurgent Fowler, making his first U.S. Open start since 2020,
poured in a tournament-record 10 birdies to set the early pace and
then waited to greet Schauffele, who was playing two groups behind,
when the fellow American matched his score.
"I knew there were birdies to be made out here, but you have to
drive it well and get the ball in position first," Fowler said.
"Yeah, did that, and from there just managed our way around really
well."
The 34-year-old American wasted little time making his move as he
birdied his opening hole, the par-four 10th, and reached the turn in
three-under 32 before a flawless trip through his closing nine holes
during which he carded five birdies.
Schauffele, who has five top-10 finishes in his six U.S. Open
starts, also got off to a flying start with three birdies across his
first five holes while avoiding a bogey all day at an event that
prides itself as being the toughest test in golf.
"It's not really what you expect playing a U.S. Open. But monkey
see, monkey do," Schauffele said. "Was just chasing Rickie (Fowler)
up the leaderboard. Glad he was just in front of me."
In the afternoon wave, LIV Golf's Johnson was enjoying an
unblemished round until a par putt on his last hole lipped out,
leading to his lone bogey of the day.
"It was a little rude that that one didn't go in, but obviously I
swung it really nicely today and hit a lot of good shots," Johnson
said.
Wyndham Clark drilled a long birdie putt on 18 to grab a share of
third place with Johnson after firing a round of six-under 64.
World number three McIlroy started red hot, covering his front nine
in five under par with help from some thunderous drives.
But he whiffed on a chip shot from the thick greenside rough on 18,
managing to avoid a double bogey with a nice putt to end his day.
McIlroy has a share of fifth place with Brian Harman who, like the
Northern Irishman, got off to a stellar start before cooling off on
the back nine.
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Jun 12, 2023; Los Angeles, California,
USA; Rickie Fowler hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during a
practice round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit:
Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
'GOOD NUMBER'
World number one Scottie Scheffler said he was pleased with carding
a 67 even though he bookended his round with bogeys.
"Hit a lot of good shots today and I did a good job of staying
patient out there," he said. "Posted a good number on a day in which
I got off to a pretty slow start."
Masters champion Jon Rahm, looking to become the first player to win
five times in a season since Justin Thomas in 2016-17, also went out
early and carded a one-under 69 after mixing three birdies with a
pair of bogeys.
Viktor Hovland, the only player to finish in the top 10 in each of
the last three majors and in his first start since his Memorial
triumph 11 days ago, also opened with a 69.
PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka and defending U.S. Open
champion Matt Fitzpatrick both got off to slow starts and laboured
to a pair of one-over 71s.
As the U.S. Open got underway, a report surfaced that the U.S.
Justice Department would review the PGA Tour's plan to form a
unified commercial entity with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment
Fund, which controls LIV Golf.
Phil Mickelson, who was the first big name to join LIV when it
launched amid a cloud of controversy, declined to comment on news of
the Saudi partnership, which rocked the sports world when it was
announced last week.
"Not yet because I don't want to detract right now from this
tournament and where I'm at," Mickelson said after carding a 69.
"I'm playing well. I want to get myself in contention. I'll talk
about it maybe after."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Additional reporting by Frank Pingue in
Toronto and Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Toby Davis, Ed
Osmond, Jamie Freed, Peter Rutherford)
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