Jake Knapp takes control at CJ Cup
Byron Nelson
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[May 04, 2024]
Jake Knapp's second straight 7-under-par 64 vaulted him into
the lead at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson on Friday in McKinney, Texas.
Starting his round on the back nine at TPC Craig Ranch, Knapp rolled
in four birdies on each side, finishing with a two-putt birdie at
the par-5 ninth to get him to 14-under 128. That was enough for a
one-shot lead over Troy Merritt, who fired a 9-under 62 Friday, and
first-round leader Matt Wallace of England (66).
Kelly Kraft (66) is in fourth at 12 under and Keith Mitchell shot a
65 to join a tie for fifth at 11 under with Davis Riley (67) and
Canada's Taylor Pendrith (67).
A 30-footer for birdie at the par-4 16th launched a run of three
straight birdies to close Knapp's first nine. He rebounded from his
only bogey of the day with a 32-foot birdie putt at the par-3 fourth
to reclaim the lead.
"Early on in the year felt like I was putting well, and for the last
month or so the stroke felt the same and ball wasn't going in the
hole," Knapp said. "So just put a little bit more of a premium the
last couple weeks on green reading. Yeah, nice to see a few more
going in."
Knapp, 29, is a PGA Tour rookie who broke through for an unlikely
win at the Mexico Open in February. He tied for fourth the following
week at the Cognizant Classic, but his results spiraled downward
after that.
"I think I just got a little tired," Knapp said. "I think mentally
it was just a lot going on, and I wouldn't say necessarily life
changing, just everything got busier and days got longer. It was
just a bit of an adjustment. Didn't feel like I had the same energy
throughout the day in some of those weeks, which was kind of a
bummer.
"Decided to take last week off and give myself a good reset at home
and work on some things I've been struggling with, and feel like
it's working out this week so far."
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Merritt also started on the back nine and made the
turn in 3-under 32, then picked up steam on the front nine. After
four more birdies, he drained a 16-foot eagle putt at No. 9 to
secure the low round of the day.
"After I three-putted 12 for bogey, I hit a 6-iron in 206 and went
over the green on 13 and then I chipped in (for birdie)," the
two-time PGA Tour winner said. "I would say getting that bogey back
right away on a tough hole like 13 was probably the momentum -- or
kept the momentum going. And then, yeah, that (eagle) was just a
great way to finish."
As for Wallace, there were two highlights to his day. A well-struck
drive at the short par-4 14th that left him just 6 feet to convert
for eagle. Later, he chipped in for birdie from 61 feet out at the
par-4 third.
Although he fell out of the top spot, his performance this week has
him projected to finish in the Aon Swing 5 to qualify for next
week's $20 million signature event, the Wells Fargo Championship.
"I'm taking care of my business, what I can do, and putting the best
move on it as possible," Wallace said.
Defending champion Jason Day of Australia posted a 70 in order to
make the cut on the number at 6 under. Jordan Spieth, the Dallas
hometown favorite and highest-ranked player in the field at No. 20,
missed the cut at 4 under (68-70).
--Field Level Media
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