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Compiled by Agence France Presse


LIV’s Koepka seizes command at storm-halted Masters

South Africa's three entrants - Charl Schwartzel, Aldrich Potgieter and Louis Oosthuizen - were all below the projected cut line.


Four-time major winner and LIV Golf rebel Brooks Koepka seized command of the Masters with a sizzling five-under par 67 before a severe storm halted Friday’s second round at Augusta National.

Koepka torched the famed course’s par-5 holes for an eagle and three birdies in a bogey-free tour. His superb shotmaking followed an opening 65, his lowest Masters round, and left him on 12-under 132 for 36 holes, four strokes in front.

“It was really solid. Didn’t really do too much wrong,” Koepka said. “You’ve got to make birdies on these par 5s, take advantage of them, and did a good job of that.”

Spain’s third-ranked Jon Rahm was second on 9-under after making a seven-foot birdie putt at the par-5 eighth and a 12-footer for birdie at the ninth.

After winning last week’s LIV Golf event in Orlando, Koepka could produce the PGA Tour’s nightmare scenario of a victory on one of golf’s greatest stages by a player from the breakaway circuit.

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Koepka, the 2017 and 2018 US Open champion and 2018 and 2019 PGA Championship winner, was in the fifth group out Friday, well ahead of storms that halted play for 21 minutes and then again with 39 players yet to finish as spectators were evacuated from the course.

Koepka was done with his round with his top rivals stuck fighting wind and rain until play was stopped.

“The biggest advantage I had was my tee time,” Koepka said.

US Amateur champion Sam Bennett fired a second 68 to stand third on 8-under 136 with two-time major winner Collin Morikawa fourth on 6-under 138 after a second 69 and Norway’s ninth-rated Viktor Hovland also at 6-under through 10 holes.

“I’m feeling confident. Hopefully I can keep it going,” Rahm said. “There’s a long way to go.”

Koepka birdied the par-5 second to grab the solo lead, then curled in a tricky 10-foot par putt at the third.

The 32-year-old American, a 2019 Masters runner-up behind Tiger Woods, eagled the par-5 eighth after a brilliant approach to become the fastest to reach 10-under at a Masters since Jordan Spieth on his way to his 2015 victory.

Koepka cleared Rae’s Creek in two at the extended par-5 13th on the way to a tap-in birdie and notched another at the 15th.

Clinical performance

“It was a clinic for 36 holes,” said Koepka’s playing partner Gary Woodland. “It was impressive to see.”

Australia’s Jason Day and Americans Sam Burns and Spieth, a three-time major winner, were on 139.

“The benefit we have, those of us chasing, is that it’s going to be incredibly difficult conditions,” Spieth said. “It means a few under goes a long way.”

World number two Rory McIlroy, who needs a Masters victory to complete a career Grand Slam, fired a 77 to stand on 149, three strokes over the expected cut line.

World number one and defending champion Scottie Scheffler struggled to a 75 to stand on 143, 11 off the lead.

Koepka is among 18 qualifiers from the Saudi-backed LIV Golf League at Augusta National, where talk of the PGA-LIV split has been set aside by players so they can focus on winning the green jacket.

“I don’t know if this is the place for healing those wounds,” two-time Masters winner Jose Maria Olazabal said.

The PGA Tour banned players who jumped to the upstart series for record $25 million purses and 54-hole events and a court fight is set for early 2024, but majors allow LIV golfers who qualify to compete.

“If you win one here, it kind of ticks a lot of boxes, doesn’t it?” Koepka said.

Tiger near cut line

Woods, a 15-time major winner and five-time Masters champion, was level par through 11 holes and right on the projected 2-over cut line overall.

At 47, Woods said he isn’t sure how many more Masters he will play, still pained by severe leg injuries from a 2021 car crash.

Woods has missed the cut only once in 24 prior Masters starts, as an amateur in 1996, a year before his record-shattering first major triumph at Augusta.

South Africa’s three entrants – Charl Schwartzel, Aldrich Potgieter and Louis Oosthuizen – were all below the projected cutline and were in danger of missing out on the second half of the tournament.

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