Rory McIlroy posted the lowest 36-hole score recorded at the US Open to double his overnight lead to a commanding six strokes in Friday’s second round at the Congressional Country Club.
The 22-year-old Northern Irishman followed up his opening 65 with five birdies and an eagle in a superb 66 early on Friday to reach the halfway stage of the 111th edition of the championship at 11-under-par 131.
His total shaved one stroke off the previous US Open record of 132, set by Ricky Barnes at Bethpage two years ago, and was just one off the lowest halfway score at any major, the 130 set by Nick Faldo at the 1992 British Open at Muirfield.
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While McIlroy was making the Blue Course look almost easy, at the other end, there were golfers such as Taiwan’s Pan Cheng-tsung, a 19-year-old amateur playing in his first US Open.
Pan, who attends the University of Washington, followed a promising first round of 74 with a 78 on Friday.
Pan’s 152 was below the cut line after the suspended second round concluded yesterday.
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“It gives me an appreciation,” said Pan, who took up the game in his home town of Miaoli, where his mother worked as a caddie. “McIlroy is 11-under right now and I’m 10-over? Twenty-one shots difference? That’s a lot. And the course is hard, as everyone knows, but there’s still a way to play these courses, so I think I’ll work harder in the future, just trying to get better.”
McIlroy was poised to go even lower, but took a double-bogey six at the last after hitting his approach into the water.
South Korea’s Yang Yong-eun, the 2009 USPGA champion, was a distant second at 137 after shooting 69. Five players were bunched at 140, nine shots back, when play was called because of failing light with 21 players still on the course.
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“It’s very near the best I can play,” world No. 7 McIlroy said after taking charge on the tree-lined course about 16km north of the White House. “It feels quite simple. I’m hitting fairways. I’m hitting greens. I’m holing my fair share of putts.”
Yang was not about to give up hope, noting that last year he had come from 10 shots back in the final round to win the Korea Open.
“So anything can happen in golf,” he said.
Bouncing back brilliantly after squandering a four-shot lead in the final round of the Masters, McIlroy showed the sublime skills that have him marked as a future No. 1 despite holding only one title apiece on the US and European tours.
McIlroy rolled in a 12-foot putt at the 17th to reach 13-under-par, surpassing the tournament record low of 12-under set by Gil Morgan during the 1992 US Open and matched by Tiger Woods when he won the 2000 championship at Pebble Beach.
Earlier he became the fastest to reach double digits under-par at a US Open when he holed out from the fairway at the par-four eighth, his 26th hole, for eagle to reach 10-under.
Even playing partner Phil Mickelson clapped in admiration at the shot by mop-topped McIlroy, who landed his approach 18 feet past the hole and watched it trickle down into the cup.
“He’s striking it flawlessly and putted great,” said five-time US Open runner-up Mickleson, who shot 69 for 143.
Despite spoiling his flawless start to the championship with the double-bogey at 18, McIlroy vowed to stay aggressive.
“I have to keep it going over the next two days,” he said. “I’m only halfway there.”
Yang, who opened with a 68, took his score to five-under after birdies at the seventh and ninth, but could not improve on that after a 42-minute delay because of a threat of lightning that interrupted the afternoon wave.
Bunched at two-under 140 were Spain’s Sergio Garcia (71) and Americans Matt Kuchar (68), 2007 Masters winner Zach Johnson (69), Brandt Snedeker (70) and Robert Garrigus (70).
Masters champion Charl Schwartzel of South Africa, who also opened with 68, shot 74 for level-par 142.
Tied at 141 were South Korea’s Kim Kyung-tae, whose 72 included six birdies, three bogeys and two double-bogeys, Spain’s Alvaro Quiros (71), Americans Davis Love III (71) and Heath Slocum (71) and Briton Robert Rock (71).
Rock, 34, continued to play solid golf despite arriving just hours before his tee time on Thursday after having troubles arranging a visa.
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