• Koepka storms into share of Friday lead

    Brooks Koepka

    Brooks Koepka showed some muscle and unleashed a monstrous finish on Friday to share the lead in THE NORTHERN TRUST.

    Koepka spent most of the second round trading birdies and bogeys, going nowhere. One swing changed everything on the 631-yard 13th hole at Ridgewood Country Club. From just under 310 yards, he swung 3-wood as hard as he could and saw the tight draw that had been missing all day. It stopped 20 feet from the hole, Koepka made it for eagle and then closed with three straight birdies for a six-under 65.

    He tied Jamie Lovemark, who shot a 66.

    ‘I wasn’t happy with the first 11 holes, the way I hit it,’ Koepka said. ‘When I hit that 3-wood, it all clicked. I felt like I was finally able to release the golf club. Just tried to hit as hard as I could, big draw. Aimed at the tree on the right and tried to draw it back to the flag. When I did that, everything started to click.’

    The US Open and PGA Championship winner took it from there.

    Lovemark, winless in 135 starts as a pro, made five birdies in a six-hole stretch around the turn and was the first to reach 10-under 132.

    Before long, a list of contenders lined up behind them in an entertaining start to the FedExCup Playoffs.

    Adam Scott, building on his confidence from playing in the final group at the PGA Championship, had a 64 for the low round of the tournament and was one shot behind. Another shot back was Dustin Johnson, the world No 1, who had another 67 that for the second straight day featured a triple-bogey on his card. At least he got this one out of the way early, taking five shots from a mangled lie in deep rough behind the first green.

    ‘That was not a fun start,’ Johnson said. ‘There was nothing to do but laugh at that point.’

    Bryson DeChambeau had a 66 and joined Johnson at 134. The group at seven-under 135 included Sean O’Hair, who is No 112 in the FedExCup and needs to get to No 70 by the third playoff event at the BMW Championship being played this year at Aronimink, his home club outside Philadelphia. He already is planning to play the member-guest a few weeks later, but O’Hair would love to play Aronimink for a $9-million purse.

    Jordan Spieth made putts to get off to a good start, only to give it all back with a triple-bogey on the 18th. Worse than pulling his tee shots into the trees, worse than the penalty shot, was Spieth sweeping in a 10-inch putt for double-bogey only to stub the putter and move the ball only a few inches.

    Scott continues to keep two putters in the bag, long and short. The idea is to use the short putter for the medium-length putts that have been a struggle for him. At the PGA Championship and at Ridgewood, however, he has found a good stroke with the long putter and felt no need to change.

    The biggest difference is confidence.

    He is starting to recognize the player who reached No 1 in the world a few years ago, and only a month ago was getting closer to falling out of the top 100. The third-place finish at Bellerive at least put him back in the top 50, but did a world of good between the ears.

    ‘It’s just been very hard to find that consistency for me this year, and I’ve been chipping away at it the last couple months and it all came good at the PGA,’ Scott said. ‘And teeing off this week, I felt the most confident of any tournament this year. I just couldn’t wait to get up here, really.’

    Koepka knows all about confidence with two major trophies sitting at home in Florida. The knock has been that he hasn’t won enough regular PGA TOUR events, so he wanted to treat the FedExCup Playoffs like majors in how he prepared, even down to renting a house and bringing his own chef, trainer and regular crew.

    Five shots out of the lead, he tugged a tee shot into the left bunker on the reachable par-four 12th, and hit a clean sand shot to three feet for birdie. Then came a big drive on the 13th, and a 3-wood that carried him to his big finish.

    Kevin Tway was the only other player to reach the 13th green in two. He shot 69 and was part of the group at seven-under 135.

    ‘Sometimes it doesn’t always go as perfectly planned as you’d like, and then you make one good golf swing, and all of a sudden you’ve got that feeling, you’ve got that rhythm and then you can build off that,’ Koepka said. ‘And that’s kind of what happened today.’

    Credit: PGA TOUR

    Article written by

    ×