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Fox makes strong start at U.S. Open

New Zealand's Ryan Fox watches his drive from the second tee on Day 3 of the PGA Championship at Wentworth Golf Club in Surrey, south west of London on October 10, 2020.

Ryan Fox is tied for 13th at the U.S. Open in L.A.
Photo: AFP

Auckland golfer Ryan Fox has made a strong start to his first round of the third major of the year – the U.S. Open in Los Angeles.

Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele carded the two lowest rounds ever at a U.S. Open with eight-under 62s to share the clubhouse lead.

Fox shot three birdies and a bogey on his way to a 2 under par 68, which has him in an eleven way tie for 14th.

World number three Rory McIroy is tied for fifth with a five under 65.

Fowler and Schauffele shared the lead after a record-setting start to the U.S. Open on Thursday at Los Angeles Country Club

World number one Scottie Scheffler was among the closest pursuers in the clubhouse five shots back and tied for seventh.

A resurgent Fowler, making his first U.S. Open start since 2020, poured in a tournament-record 10 birdies to set the early pace and then waited to greet Schauffele, who was playing two groups behind, when the fellow American matched his score.

“I knew there was birdies to be made out here, but you have to drive it well and get the ball in position first,” Fowler said.

“Yeah, did that, and from there just managed our way around really well.”

The 34-year-old American wasted little time making his move as he birdied his opening hole, the par-four 10th, and reached the turn in three-under 32 before a flawless trip through his closing nine holes during which he carded five birdies.

Rickie Fowler

Rickie Fowler carded the lowest round ever at a U.S. Open with an eight-under 62.
Photo: Icon

Schauffele, who has five top-10 finishes in his six U.S. Open starts, also got off to a flying start with three birdies across his first five holes while avoiding a bogey all day at an event that prides itself as being the toughest test in golf.

“It’s not really what you expect playing a U.S. Open. But monkey see, monkey do,” Schauffele said.

“Was just chasing Rickie (Fowler) up the leaderboard. Glad he was just in front of me.”

Pre-tournament favourite Scheffler, former champion Bryson DeChambeau of LIV Golf, South Korea’s Kim Si-woo and lowly-ranked Frenchman Paul Barjon were all in the clubhouse five shots back of the co-leaders.

“The scores were a bit lower than I imagined them to be, but going out early on Thursday it’s the easiest conditions you’re going to see most of the week,” said Scheffler, whose only two bogeys bookended his round.

“Hit a lot of good shots today and I did a good job of staying patient out there and posted a good number on a day in which I got off to a pretty slow start.”

Masters champion Jon Rahm, looking to become the first player to win five times in a season since Justin Thomas in 2016-17, also went out early and carded a one-under 69 after mixing three birdies with a pair of bogeys.

Viktor Hovland, the only player to finish in the top 10 in each of the last three majors and in his first start since his Memorial triumph 11 days ago, opened with a one under 69.

Among the other notable late starters, PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka was one over through nine holes while defending U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick was one over through 10 holes.

As the U.S. Open got underway, a report surfaced that the U.S. Justice Department would review the PGA Tour’s plan to form a unified commercial entity with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, which controls LIV Golf.

-Reuters/RNZ

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