Patrick Cantlay takes early lead at
Genesis Invitational
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[February 16, 2024]
Patrick Cantlay rode his irons and putter to an opening
7-under-par 64 on Thursday, giving him a one-shot lead after 18
holes at the Genesis Invitational in Pacific Palisades, Calif.
Cantlay finished with more birdies (eight) than fairways in
regulation (seven of 14) but recovered nicely and birdied three of
the four par-3 holes at Riviera Country Club. He sits just ahead of
Luke List and Australians Cam Davis and Jason Day, who shot rounds
of 65.
Jordan Spieth, Will Zalatoris and Tom Hoge are two off the pace at
66 as the PGA Tour began its third signature event of the 2024
season.
"Obviously got off to a great start," Cantlay said. "Our group had
good momentum, (Spieth) and I were a bunch under on the front nine
and, you know, a day where I putted really, really well, made every
putt I should have and a couple longer ones."
That included a 26-footer for birdie at the par-4 eighth hole and a
28-footer that dropped for his final birdie of the day at the par-3
14th.
Cantlay ranked third in the field in strokes gained on approach and
second in strokes gained putting. However, he did manage to hit a
tree with his tee shot at the par-3 16th, and his second shot landed
in a bunker, leading to his only bogey of the day.
"You know, I got up and down for bogey, it was a good up and down,"
Cantlay said. "Obviously a spot I've never been. I've been on most
places on this golf course, but started off today eight birdies and
one bogey, great start."
Of the three players tied for second, List and Day went bogey-free
with six birdies apiece. List has two PGA Tour wins to his name,
most recently last October in a playoff at the Sanderson Farms
Championship.
"It replicates major championship golf so you have tough conditions
around the greens, ball-striking's at a premium," List said of
Riviera. "Anytime you can get a golf course that you like, it gives
you a little extra pep in your step a little bit playing."
As for Day, a three-birdie run at Nos. 9-11 got his round going. Day
didn't win on tour for five years while battling injuries before
returning to the winner's circle last May at the AT&T Byron Nelson.
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"To be able to kind of get that back in the
rearview mirror now where I can kind of focus on actually practicing
and putting good work in, it's been nice because for a moment there
I just didn't know if it was really going to pan out for me and I
thought maybe it's kind of like I'm at the end of it in regards to
my playing days," Day said.
"But it was nice to be able to kind of put that work in, see the
body react the way it has and be able to practice and like through
time and effort, that's when the good play starts to come back."
Tournament host Tiger Woods played his first round at an official
PGA Tour event since withdrawing from the Masters 10 months ago and
undergoing ankle surgery. He posted five birdies and six bogeys en
route to a 1-over 72.
"A lot of good and a lot of indifferent," Woods said of his round.
"It was one or the other. I don't know how many pars I had, wasn't
many. I was either making birdies or bogeys and just never really
got anything consistent going today."
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is part of a group at 3-under 68,
while Rickie Fowler, Tony Finau, Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa
and Norway's Viktor Hovland are among those tied at 1-under 70.
Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy made a double bogey and a triple
bogey on back-to-back holes to plummet to a 3-over 74, tied for 64th
out of 70 golfers. His second shot at the par-3 16th hole did not
get over a tall bunker wall, and his putt for bogey sped past the
cup, leading to a three-putt triple bogey.
There will be a 36-hole cut on Friday to include the top 50 players
and ties, plus anyone within 10 strokes of the lead.
--Field Level Media
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