53-year-old Steve Stricker sits 1 stroke back in Phoenix Open
American is trying to become oldest winner in PGA Tour history
Steve Stricker is having too much fun at the Waste Management Phoenix Open to stress over a messy finish Friday.
Trying to become the oldest winner in PGA Tour history, the 53-year-old U.S. Ryder Cup captain shot a 5-under 66 to get within a stroke of leader Xander Schauffele entering the weekend at TPC Scottsdale.
Stricker scrambled for par on the eighth, but couldn't overcome another poor approach on No. 9 in a closing bogey.
"Just hit an awful iron into the green on No. 9," Stricker said. "But overall a good day."
Stricker, who will be 54 on Feb. 23, won the last of his 12 PGA Tour titles in 2012 at Kapalua. Sam Snead is the oldest winner at 52 years, 10 months, 8 days in the 1965 Greater Greensboro event. Seven players have won in their 50s, the last Davis Love III at 51 in the 2015 Wyndham Championship.
"I know it's a long shot," Stricker said. "I've got to play my very best, just like anybody else does out here. But you know, I've been there. I've won a few times out on this tour and I know what it takes, although it's been a while. It would be fun to see how I handle it if I do get that opportunity."
WATCH | Schauffele takes over lead in 2nd round:
The five-time PGA Tour Champions winner, with wife, Nicki, working as his caddie, birdied four of his first eight holes with hardly anyone watching in the chilly morning conditions. The attendance is capped at about 5,000 a day, a fraction of the usual turnout but the most for a tour event since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"It's always tough to get going around here in the morning and we started on the back nine with some pretty good holes and some water holes that can come up and get you," Stricker said.
The fourth-ranked Schauffele, coming off a second-place tie last week at Torrey Pines, played the back nine in 6-under 30 in the afternoon for a 64. He birdied Nos. 12-14, made a 21-footer for eagle on the par-5 15th, and hit a wedge to 4 1/2 feet to set up a final birdie on the par-4 18th.
"It was a bit slow at first," Schauffele said. "Kind of saw everyone's name flying up the leaderboard."
He was at 12-under 130.
Keegan Bradley was tied for second after a 65. He made 10 birdies in a 14-hole stretch from his 12th hole Thursday to the seventh Friday — all on the front nine.
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"All it was was having some putts go in," Bradley said.
Scottie Scheffler (65), Sam Burns (68) and Kyoung-Hoon Lee (66) were 10 under. Scheffler hit to a foot for birdie in the morning on the 16th.
"There was literally nobody there, so I couldn't tell if it had a chance or not," Scheffler said.
He followed with a 40-foot eagle putt on 17, but gave back the strokes with a four-putt double bogey on the par-4 fifth.
Canadian competitors
Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., (70) and Corey Conners of Listowel, Ont., (68) are both 5 under, while Abbotsford's Nick Taylor (70) was 2 under and expected to miss the 3-under cutline.
Jordan Spieth and Brooks Koepka were 8 under.
Spieth is trying regain the form that carried him to 11 PGA Tour victories — three of them majors — in his first five seasons on the tour. Winless since the 2017 British Open, he shot his second straight 67, highlighted by an eagle on the par-5 third.
"It felt like a 6- or 7-under day, and this is one of the first times I've almost been disappointed shooting 4 under in a round in long time, and that's a good sign," he said. "(Yesterday) I shot 4 under, but I got away with murder."
Third-ranked Justin Thomas was 7 under after a 65. He opened with a double bogey on the par-4 10th after making a late triple bogey Thursday on 17.
"Hit a perfect tee shot down 10 and had a pitching wedge in and made about as easy and bad of a 6 as you possibly could," Thomas said.
He had five birdies in a six-hole stretch from No. 14 to No. 1, bogeyed the par-5 third, and then birdied four of the last five.
"I stayed patient and understood that you can make a boatload of birdies," he said.