Davis Thompson leads by 1 over
Scottie Scheffler with Rory McIlroy lurking at Torrey Pines
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[February 15, 2025]
By DOUG FERGUSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Davis Thompson capped a roller coaster of a back
nine at Torrey Pines with a birdie to take the lead Friday in the
Genesis Invitational. Scottie Scheffler had an unusually wild day
off the tee and was right on his heels.
It set up for a compelling weekend in this $20 million signature
event with two names leaping off the pages of the leaderboard —
Scheffler, playing bogey-free despite hitting only five fairways,
and Rory McIlroy showing the form that led him to victory at Pebble
Beach.
Thompson made only two pars on the back nine and finished with a
wedge to a foot for birdie and a 6-under 66 for a one-shot lead over
Scheffler.
“We're halfway through, still a lot of golf left,” Thompson said.
“Yeah, just trying to stay in my own lane.”
Scheffler, whose start to the year was delayed by a freak hand
injury, appears to be gaining comfort in his game even if it didn't
always look that way in far more agreeable weather along the Pacific
bluffs.
He twice hit off the 12th tee, the first one with a 50-yard chip
shot back to the 11th green for a remarkable par save. His tee shot
on the par-3 11th was so far left it twice bounced on the cart path,
and it settled close enough to a water station that he got free
relief.
He had a shot right of a bunker that was right of the fourth fairway
and had to flex his right leg to keep from falling into the sand. He
managed another par there. On the seventh, another miss well to the
left, he had to kick his right leg on the follow-through to muscle
it out of rough that would even make the U.S. Open blush. That found
the green for a simple par.
He also holed a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 sixth and
converted three other birdies for a round of 67 that put him in the
final group.
“I love see that,” Scheffler said about his ability to score on day
when his ball striking wasn't quite up to standard. “I feel like
those short little touchy shots are always the ones that are the
last to come back after a longer layover. It's nice to get those
feels back.”
He then headed to the range for a quick session with his driver.
Thompson, who won for the first time last year at the John Deere
Classic, was at 8-under 136 and will play in the final group
Saturday with Scheffler.
Denny McCarthy birdied the last hole for a 70 and will be paired
with McIlroy.
McIlroy surged up the leaderboard by going 5 under over his opening
10 holes until running into a few issues off the tee on holes where
it's hard to recover. He rallied with a pair of birdies, but his
lament was playing the par 5s with only one birdie.
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Davis Thompson hits a shot onto the 15th green of the South Course
at Torrey Pines during the second round of the Genesis Invitational
golf tournament Friday, Feb. 14, 2025, in San Diego. (AP
Photo/Gregory Bull)

Even shot, his 67 left him only three shots behind.
“I hit a lot of really good shots. I played well for the most part.
I scrambled well,” McIlroy said. “I just didn’t take advantage of
the par 5s. ... Look, I made up for it in other places, which was
nice. But I know going into the weekend I’m going to have to play
the par 5s better.”
The signature events hosted by a player — Tiger Woods at the Genesis
Invitational, though he is not playing this week — have a 36-hole
cut of the top 50 and ties. Among those leaving early were Sepp
Straka, who won in the California desert and was leading the FedEx
Cup, and Jordan Spieth, who was coming off a tie for fourth in the
Phoenix Open last week.
Also missing the cut was Max Homa, who has not made it to the
weekend in the three events he has played this year with a 36-hole
cut.

Scheffler wasn't the only player who leaned hard on his short game.
Thompson got up-and-down for par on the 10th hole. He chipped in for
birdie on the next two holes, regained the lead with a birdie on the
par-5 13th, and then bogeyed the next two holes.
But his 25-foot birdie putt on the par-3 16th got him back on track,
and he had the advantage of being in the first cut on the 18th to
help take some spin off a wedge he hit to tap-in range.
Among those chasing is Ludvig Aberg, who was eager to get back to
Torrey Pines. He shot 66 to get within four shots of the lead on a
meaty course that he loves. Aberg got a nasty stomach virus he tried
to play through three weeks ago, and it caused him to withdraw at
Pebble Beach after the opening round.
Aberg was at 140 with Patrick Rodgers, who had a 71.
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