Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas among leaders at Masters; Tiger stuck in neutral | TribLIVE.com
U.S./World Sports

Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas among leaders at Masters; Tiger stuck in neutral

Associated Press
3233486_web1_3233486-4809c49d239b4c5bbb7cca2f4b0a0338
AP
Abraham Ancer shares the lead after the partially completed second round at Augusta National.
3233486_web1_3233486-f2559ffa241344d28f566a736a0ffb24
AP
Dustin Johnson watches his bunker shot on the second hole during the second round of the Masters on Friday. Johnson is among the leaders, with the second round set to be completed Saturday morning.
3233486_web1_3233486-f2caa9d2cd3144418427733dad26c876
AP
Tiger Woods reacts to missing a putt on the sixth hole during the second round of the Masters on Friday. Woods remained at 4-under-par for the tournament, five shots behind the leaders, with eight holes to finish in his second round.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The buzz was back Friday at Augusta National, loud as ever.

It wasn’t from any of the patrons, because they’re not allowed in this most usual Masters in November. It came from the constant humming of motors of the sub-air system beneath the soft turf in an attempt to make the course a little firmer, a lot more like a typical Masters in April.

“You have to really throw all the past knowledge out the window this week, as weird as it is,” said Justin Thomas, who hit a few short-game shots that required trust and imagination for rounds of 66-69.

That gave Thomas a share of the lead with Dustin Johnson (65-70), Cameron Smith (67-68) and Abraham Ancer (68-67), a Masters rookie who doesn’t know this course any other way.

“A lot of the history and things that you know about the golf course, it can sometimes hurt you this week because of what you’re used to,” Thomas said. “But at the end of the day, it is a lot softer and a lot more scorable.”

Progress could be measured in greens that began to pick up some pace and scoring that didn’t get out of control.

Johnson, looking every bit like the No. 1 player in the world, had four birdies on the back nine in the morning for a 65, breaking by two shots his best round at Augusta. He birdied his way through Amen Corner at the start of his second round and quickly reached 10-under.

Johnson was slowed by a three-putt bogey on the 14th and a 3-iron that caught enough of a gust to come up short on the par-5 15th and roll back into the water, leading to another bogey.

He finished with a birdie for a 70 and was atop the leaderboard with the others at 9-under-par 135 when the second round was halted by darkness, a product of a weather delay at the start of the tournament that has put the Masters behind schedule.

The forecast for the weekend is favorable: warm and mostly sunny.

“I think it can firm up a little bit, but it’s going to be tough for it to get firm,” Johnson said. “I think it’s going to be soft enough to where you’re going to have to attack the golf course and play aggressive and keep swinging like I am. I like where I’m at.”

Still to be determined is what that position will be. Hideki Matsuyama was at 8-under with three holes remaining, and Jon Rahm was at 8-under and had six holes left, including both par 5s on the back nine.

Another Masters rookie, Sungjae Im (70), was in the group another shot behind that included Patrick Cantlay (66), who contended for the green jacket last year. Cantlay was among four players who had 66, the lowest score when play was stopped for the night.

Peters Township native Brendon Todd shot a second consecutive 73 and is at 2-over, in danger of missing the projected cut of even par.

Among those still on the course was Tiger Woods, stuck in neutral on a day when the greens picked up a little more speed and the autumn leaves shook slightly with some wind. Bryson DeChambeau was struggling to make the cut after a lost ball that led to a triple bogey.

Woods left the course Thursday with only three players ahead of him. He was tied for 10th when the first round ended, and he was tied for 22nd when he left Friday night with two birdies on the par 5s and bogeys on the third and seventh, the latter from a tee shot close enough to the Georgia pines that his only shot was to hit a runner into the front bunker.

DeChambeau, the betting favorite coming into the week because of his enormous bulk and power off the tee, took a big swing on No. 3 and never found the ball. With the altitude on his shots, it could have buried under the soft turf. Either way, he went back to the tee and drove in about the same spot, made a mess of his flop shot and took a triple bogey.

He followed with two more bogeys but was in good position for a birdie to get back to even par for the tournament.

The cut is top 50 and ties, and among those who will be sticking around are young and old: 23-year-old U.S. Amateur runner-up John Augenstein and 63-year-old Bernhard Langer. The two-time Masters champion shot 68 in the morning on a long, soft course. He followed with a 73 and will be the oldest player to make the cut.

Rory McIlroy opened with a 75 and was in danger of the weekend off until he rallied with a 66 to at least get back in the mix in his pursuit of the final leg of the career Grand Slam.

Three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson also is into the weekend and could be in position to win his fourth. He is four shots behind the leaders after following his opening-round 69 with a 70 on Friday.

Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.

Get Ad-Free >

Categories: Sports | U.S./World Sports
Sports and Partner News