Rickie Fowler shoots 65 to take early PGA Championship lead

Rickie Fowler watches his tee shot on the 11th hole during the first round of the PGA Championship on Thursday. Photo: Jeff Roberson/AP

Rickie Fowler watches his tee shot on the 11th hole during the first round of the PGA Championship on Thursday. Photo: Jeff Roberson/AP

Published Aug 9, 2018

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ST LOUIS – Rickie Fowler, a top-five finisher twice in every major without a win to show for it, fired a five-under par 65 on Thursday to grab an early two-stroke clubhouse lead at the 100th PGA Championship.

Ninth-ranked Fowler, who began on the back nine at Bellerive Country Club, drained a 31-foot birdie putt at the par-4 seventh hole.

And at the par-5 eighth, he reached a greenside bunker in two, then blasted to eight feet and made the birdie putt to reach five-under.

England’s Ian Poulter birdied three of his first six holes and shared second, joining Americans Austin Cook and Pat Perez in the locker room on 67.

“I got off to a flying start,” Poulter said.

“You definitely want to post a number on the fresh greens. They kept them a little slower than they wanted. It was a good day.”

In the feature early pairing, defending champion Justin Thomas was on two-under with Rory McIlroy at level par and Tiger Woods at one-over through 16 holes.

Considered a solid contender to win a major in his 20s when he turned pro at age 20 in 2009, Fowler has one final chance to lift a major trophy before turning 30 in December.

Fowler, who matched his best major showing with a runner-up effort at this year’s Masters, had four top-five major finishes without a win in 2014, sharing second at the US Open and Open Championships.

He became the first player to top-fives in all four majors without a win.

Fowler, who found 11 of 14 fairways and 16 of 18 greens in regulation, sank a five-foot birdie putt at 14 but at the par-3 16th found a bunker and made bogey. 

He bounced back with a 12-foot birdie putt at the par-5 17th, a 14-footer at the first and six-footer to birdie the third.

Just one of @RickieFowler's 6️⃣birdies today!

He is the clubhouse leader at 5-under. pic.twitter.com/hCD8aZPdBg

— PGA Championship (@PGAChampionship) August 9, 2018

The superstar trio with Woods began off the 10th tee with thousands of spectators lining the fairway, standing 10 deep in spots just to glimpse the master shot-makers.

Instead, Woods endured an early horror show, McIlroy was grinding and only Thomas was showing major champion form.

Second-ranked Thomas, coming off a WGC victory on Sunday, sank birdie putts from five feet at 11 and seven feet at 12, rescued par from a bunker at the par-3 13th and added another birdie at 15 before a bogey at the fourth dropped him back.

Thomas, 25, could become the first player since McIlroy in 2014 to make the PGA his second win in back-to-back weeks and join Woods as the only men since 1937 to win consecutive PGAs.

Woods, a 14-time major champion in a comeback season after spinal fusion surgery, struggled from the start, finding right rough off the 10th tee and making a nervy five-foot bogey putt.

The 42-year-old former world number one found water with his second shot on the way to a double-bogey six at 11, but dropped his approach to two feet and birdied the 12th.

He was undone again at the par-3 16th, needing two chips to escape the rough and tapping in for bogey.

Woods battled back, however, sinking consecutive birdie putts from four feet at 18 and nine feet at the first.

. @RickieFowler was supposed to wear blue today. He went with yellow instead. pic.twitter.com/NEvKPUimdO

— PGA Championship (@PGAChampionship) August 9, 2018

Woods briefly led in the final round of last month’s Open Championship, but he hasn’t won a major since the 2008 US Open or any title since 2013.

Four-time major champion McIlroy, whose last major triumph came in 2014, found a bunker at 10 and made bogey.

He then sank birdie putts from eight feet at 11 and 12 feet at the par-3 13th, only to close his first nine with a bogey to stand on level par, then opened his second nine with seven pars.

AFP

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