Brendon Todd takes two-stroke lead with a 65 in Memphis
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Brendon Todd’s putter is more than making up for any lack of power off the tee at the World Golf Championship.
Todd shot a five-under-par 65 on Friday and grabbed a two-stroke lead through 36 holes of the FedEx St. Jude Invitational.
“I have not hit the ball as crisply the first two days and maybe some other tournaments this year, but I’ve probably putted the best of any tournament this year so far,†Todd said. “I’m really excited about how I played and looking forward to the opportunity this weekend.â€
Todd trailed defending champion Brooks Koepka after the first round by two strokes. He quickly erased that deficit and took the lead to himself with a bogey-free, five-birdie round for a 129 total at the World Golf Championships event at TPC Southwind.
Rickie Fowler closed with birdies on his final two holes for a 67 and 131 total just behind Todd thanks to his own putter.
The Pac-12 football schedule was released Friday, and USC and UCLA are scheduled to play each other at the Rose Bowl on Sept. 26 to open the season.
“I feel like I’m heading in the right direction,†Fowler said. “I think that’s been my main goal is go through some changes for the better. Sometimes you’ve got to take that step back to take two steps forward. I feel like we already made the step back. I feel like we’ve made a step forward. I’m looking for that next step.â€
Koepka had the lead to himself at 10 under before falling apart on his back nine with a double bogey and two bogeys. He finished with a 71, his first time over par at this course in seven rounds. He was four strokes back, tied with Byeong Hun An (65) and Chez Reavie (67).
But Koepka said he wasn’t worried with 36 holes remaining.
“I just putted bad,†Koepka said. “It wasn’t really anything other than that. Felt stress-free other than just missing some short ones. On the back nine they felt good, they were just missing, and on the front they just weren’t good putts.â€
Jon Rahm shot a 74 and now is four over in his first event as No. 1 in the world.
Justin Thomas, who could go back to No. 1 in the world with a win, was seven strokes back after a 70. Rory McIlroy’s bid to be No. 1 again might have to wait until the PGA championship next week. He shot a 66, but is 10 strokes back.
Experts say playing in arenas and stadiums with no fans can have a wide variety of effects on athletes. Some may perform better, others worse.
This round started early Friday morning to avoid expected thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Todd won back-to-back tournaments last November for his first win on tour since winning the Byron Nelson in 2014. Since the return to play in June, Todd missed two cuts with his best finish a tie for 11th at the Travelers Championship.
On Friday, his putter worked well enough that he needed only 24 putts in a round that featured a 50-footer for birdie on the par-three No. 14. Todd hit a six-iron to the left side of the green, and he had to roll the ball over a mound breaking left at least five feet.
“My caddie really kind of set me up with a good spot there beyond the hole to aim at, and I just focused all on speed,†Todd said. “It happened to just drift right there in the middle of the hole. Bonus birdie there, but that’s what you’ve got to do to win golf tournaments sometimes, and that’s how you shoot low rounds.â€
Todd sunk a 13-footer on the par-three island green of No. 11 to go nine under just as Koepka became the first to reach double digits under par.
Koepka then double-bogeyed No. 2 when he three-putted after missing a par putt from three feet. His putter cost him a birdie chance on the par-five No. 3.
That put Todd atop the leaderboard at nine under, and his putter helped him birdie consecutive holes including the big putt on No. 14. He sunk a 12-footer on No. 15 to go 11 under for a four-stroke lead until Fowler’s birdie-birdie finish.
Fowler might have had a piece of the lead if not for hitting his tee shot into the water in front of the island green at No. 11. He rebounded by hitting his approach 175 yards on No. 17 to three feet for birdie, and he chipped in from just off the front of the green on No. 18.
“It’s been nice to see some putts go in,†Fowler said. “These greens are about as good as they get. It’s been nice to kind of have them stay on the softer side and make it very playable when you’re driving in the fairway.â€
Divots: Todd made only five of 39 cuts combined in 2016, `2017 and 2018. He got his tour card back by finishing seventh in points on the Korn Ferry Tour Finals in 2019. Tommy Fleetwood holed out from 106 yards to wrap up his round with a 67.
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