US Open: Rickie Fowler one ahead after eventful second round as Rory McIlroy makes late birdie charge | Golf News
Wyndham Clark one off halfway lead and Rory McIlroy two strokes back in third at LA Country Club; Rickie Fowler birdied 18 of his opening 36 holes – a US Open record – to hold the halfway lead; Watch live on Saturday from 6pm on Sky Sports Golf
By Ali Stafford
Last Updated: 17/06/23 4:34am
Highlights from the second round of the US Open at Los Angeles Country Club, where Rory McIlroy and Rickie Fowler are both in contention
Rickie Fowler came through a wild second round to take a one-shot lead into the weekend at the US Open, as Rory McIlroy charged into contention in Los Angeles.
Fowler followed Thursday’s record-breaking 62 by posting just four pars during a second-round 68 at Los Angeles Country Club, mixing eight birdies with six bogeys to move to 10 under and equal the US Open’s 36-hole scoring record.
The five-time PGA Tour winner tops the leaderboard ahead of Wyndham Clark, who set the initial clubhouse target after a three-under 67, while McIlroy is just two strokes back and in third spot as he chases a first major victory since 2014.
Rory McIlroy shot himself in to contention at the 2023 US Open with four birdies in his last five holes during the second round at Los Angeles Country Club.
McIlroy birdied four of his five holes to sign for a second-round 67, as Xander Schauffele – who joined Fowler in creating major history on the opening day – birdied his final two holes to salvage a level-par 70 and join the world No 3 in tied-third.
Fowler holds halfway lead in Los Angeles
Schauffele and Fowler held a two-stroke cushion after the opening day, where they posted the lowest rounds in US Open history and matched the all-time record for a men’s major, although started their second rounds a shot behind after Wyndham Clark had moved to nine under.
Rickie Fowler opened his second round of the US Open with three straight birdies at Los Angeles Country Club.
Fowler got up and down from a greenside bunker to take advantage of the par-five first and start a run of three consecutive birdies, briefly taking him two ahead and moving him to 11 under quicker than any player has previously managed in US Open history.
The American hit a poor tee shot after a long wait at the fourth tee, resulting in a first bogey of his round, then cancelled out a 10-foot birdie at the sixth by three-putting from long-range at the next.
Live US Open Golf
June 17, 2023, 6:00pm
Live on
Schauffele opened with five straight pars before undoing a five-foot birdie at the sixth by also three-putting the next, his first dropped shot of the week, with both players then picking up shots at the par-five eighth.
Fowler reached the turn two ahead but slipped back into a three-way tie when he posted back-to-back bogeys from the tenth, with the world No 45’s rollercoaster round seeing him drain a 20-foot birdie at the 12th ahead of him three-putting from long range at the next.
Rickie Fowler made birdie on the 12th hole during the second round of the US Open to retake the lead after back-to-back bogies at Los Angeles Country Club.
Schauffele slipped down the leaderboard with three consecutive bogeys from the 13th, while Fowler rolled in from eight feet at the 15th and responded to a dropped shot at the next by birdieing the 17th to restore a one-shot advantage.
Fowler then made a two-putt par at the last to remain at 10 under, with the 130 shots taken over the first two days matching Martin Kaymer’s record-low total set on his way to 2014 victory at Pinehurst.
US Open leader Rickie Fowler reviewed his round after going in to the weekend at Los Angeles Country Club with a one shot leader over Wyndham Clark.
“We’ll try and clean some of that up,” Fowler said. “The birdies are out there if you put yourself in the right position, but as you can see, bogeys are very easy to make!”
Schauffele responded to his back-nine wobble by birdieing his final two holes and getting back to eight under, with McIlroy – the 2011 US Open champion – also on that total after almost making a hole-in-one on his final hole of the day.
Rory McIlroy almost holed his tee shot at the par 3 ninth hole at Los Angeles Country Club during the second round of the US Open.
Harris English sits in fifth spot ahead of Min Woo Lee and Dustin Johnson, who recovered from a quadruple-bogey at the par-four second to salvage a level-par 70 to head into the weekend on six under, with world No 1 Scottie Scheffler five off the halfway lead after a two-under 68.
Defending champion Matt Fitzpatrick fired the third hole-in-one of the week at the par-three 15th on his way to a level-par 70, while world No 2 Jon Rahm snuck into the weekend on the cut mark after finishing a three-over 73 with four bogeys in his last eight holes.
Who will win the 123rd US Open? Watch throughout the weekend live on Sky Sports. Live coverage continues Saturday from 6pm on Sky Sports Golf and 10pm on Sky Sports Main Event.
Pingback: Alexander Brother Sexploited
Pingback: tokens my free cam
Pingback: ไม้พื้น