
Scotland's MacIntyre fires 64 to stay atop BMW Championship
The 29-year-old Scotsman, who fired a PGA career-low 62 on Thursday as he closed with six straight birdies, birdied six in all for round two to stand on 14-under 126 after 36 holes at Caves Valley in suburban Baltimore.
"Great two days' work," MacIntyre said. "If you leave yourself in the right positions you can be aggressive with the putts... I feel like my iron play has been top drawer this week and just continue to do that."
Scheffler, the season points leader, was next on 131 after a 65 in his PGA-best 13th bogey-free round of the season.
"It was nice to have a clean card today, no bogeys," Scheffler said. "Did some good things out there. Five shots back going into the weekend is not too bad with the way Bob is playing right now. Did a good job to keep within shouting distance of him."
Sweden's Ludvig Aberg birdied three of the last five holes to shoot 64 and stand second on 132, one stroke ahead of Japan's Hideki Matsuyama with England's Tommy Fleetwood and Americans Maverick McNealy and Michael Kim on 134.
MacIntyre, runner-up to J.J. Spaun at June's US Open, managed his lowest opening 36-hole score to par in a PGA event, three strokes better than last year at Myrtle Beach.
"I've been working hard," MacIntyre said. "I've been putting really well for a long time now. It was just finding the confidence in the tee to green game and I feel like I've done that."
MacIntyre, who began the day with a three-stroke lead over England's Tommy Fleetwood with top-ranked Scottie Scheffler another stroke adrift, started strong again.
He sank a birdie putt from just inside five feet at the first hole and rolled in a 17-footer for birdie at the par-five fourth.
"The way I've been rolling it, it's not a surprise," MacIntyre said of his strong start.
He sank another birdie putt from just beyond seven feet at the seventh and at 11, MacIntyre rolled it to within three feet of the hole and sank his short birdie putt.
MacIntyre drained a 28-foot birdie putt at the 14th and reached the green in two at the par-five 16th to set up a tap-in birdie.
"A low drive to stay short of the bunker and then probably hit the longest three-wood I've had on tour, it was 281 (yards) to the front edge and I absolutely smashed it," MacIntyre said of his effort at 16.
"Left quite a tricky putt but the job is not to make three, the job is to make four and just nudged it down to the hole and knocked it in."
MacIntyre, whose two PGA wins came last year at the Canadian and Scottish Opens, is projected to jump from 20th to third on the season points list, with only the top 30 advancing from the BMW, the second FedEx Cup playoff event, to next week's Tour Championship in Atlanta.
Scheffler, whose four victories this season include major triumphs at the PGA Championship and British Open, hopes to next week become the first back-to-back FedEx Cup winner.
Matsuyama birdied four of the last eight holes to also shoot a bogey-free 64 and stand on 133 while Fleetwood only managed a 69 and fell eight off MacIntyre's pace.
"Disappointing finish," Fleetwood said. "Felt like I played good again. I'm in fifth place, so it's hard to moan too much about it."
World number two Rory McIlroy, second in the playoff standings, fired a 66 to stand 11th on 136, 10 off the pace.
"I just want to try to play a good weekend and feel a little bit better about my game going into the Tour Championship," McIlroy said. - AFP

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Malaysia Sun
5 hours ago
- Malaysia Sun
Bhatia's late birdies keep Tour Championship hopes alive
Maryland [US], August 17 (ANI): Akshay Bhatia kept his hopes of qualifying for the Tour Championship alive with a gritty finish at the BMW Championship. The Indian-American carded a 1-under 69 in the second round to move from tied-46th to tied-37th at the midway stage. With rounds of 75 and 69, Bhatia sits at 4-over for 36 holes, just outside the coveted Top-30 who advance to the season-ending finale, according to a release from BMW Championship. Bhatia, the Hero golfer, who finished sixth at last week's FedEx St. Jude Championship, endured a mixed round at Caves Valley. He dropped three bogeys against a lone birdie on the front nine and remained 1-over through 16 holes. However, he staged a late rally with clutch birdies on the last two holes--sinking putts from six and twelve feet--to rescue his round and remain in contention. Currently projected at 32nd in the FedEx Cup standings, he must climb into the Top-30 to secure a second consecutive Tour Championship berth. At the top, Scotland's Robert MacIntyre continued his blistering form. Following an opening 62 that included six straight birdies, he backed it up with a bogey-free 64 to reach 14-under 126. That gave him a commanding five-shot lead over World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (66-65) heading into the weekend. The 27-year-old MacIntyre, who won the RBC Canadian Open earlier this season, set a career-best 36-hole score and tied the largest halfway lead at the BMW Championship since Jason Day's five-shot advantage in 2015, when Day went on to win by six. Scheffler, despite a hot afternoon, maintained steady momentum with a 65, while Sweden's Ludvig Aberg surged with a 64 to sit six shots behind the leader. Japan's Hideki Matsuyama, remarkably bogey-free over 36 holes despite feeling unwell, posted a 64 and is in solo fourth, seven shots back. Michael Kim (66) and Tommy Fleetwood (69) shared fifth place, eight behind MacIntyre, while Rory McIlroy battled back from an early double bogey to sign for 66. The Northern Irishman trails by ten shots. (ANI)


New Straits Times
11 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Robert MacIntyre leads Scottie Scheffler by four at BMW Championship
OWINGS MILLS: Robert MacIntyre likes to lean on that old chestnut: "It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog." The unassuming Scotsman is a few inches shorter than Scottie Scheffler, and it's a similar story when you compare their resumes. Yet it's MacIntyre who is one round away from a wire-to-wire victory at the BMW Championship. MacIntyre drained a 41-foot, left-to-right birdie putt at the 18th hole of Caves Valley Golf Club on Saturday, ensuring he'll carry a four-stroke advantage over the World No. 1 into the final round. MacIntyre posted a 2-under-par 68 to climb to 16-under 194 at the second leg of the FedEx Cup playoffs. Where MacIntyre's first two rounds featured birdies in bunches, his third round was about keeping Scheffler at arm's length. "Every save, every shot is a prisoner for me," MacIntyre said. "Yeah, that shot there is no more important than that one I've hit on 18, any of the shots I've hit today. I've played beautifully all week, so it's just about continuing that going into tomorrow." Playing in the final pairing with MacIntyre, Scheffler managed a 3-under 67 but never got closer than three shots of the lead. He and MacIntyre will play in the final pairing again Sunday. "I think Bob has got a four-shot lead going into tomorrow and it's up to me," Scheffler said. "He's playing some great golf, and it's up to me to go out there and chase him down." Ludvig Aberg of Sweden is alone in third at 10 under after he sank a 30-foot birdie putt at the last hole to shoot 68. Sam Burns and Englishman Harry Hall both shot 67 and are tied for fourth at 8 under, while Maverick McNealy and England's Tommy Fleetwood are another shot back after matching 69s. Rickie Fowler rolled in five birdies in a round of 67, moving to 6 under and a tie for eighth with Michael Kim (70) and Norway's Viktor Hovland (69). MacIntyre recovered from an opening bogey by birdieing Nos. 4 and 9; he also made a difficult par save at the par-4 fifth hole in which he punched out of a heavily-treed native area. Scheffler made three birdies through 11 holes but was caught up in a greenside bunker on No. 12 and made his only bogey. He got the stroke back at No. 14 with an 18-foot birdie putt. MacIntyre followed Scheffler with a par putt, and in an eye-catching move with the Ryder Cup six weeks away, he appeared to shush pro-Scheffler American fans. "He was just jeering. He was shouting I missed it, pushed it," MacIntyre said. "Pushed it right in the middle of the hole, I guess." At the next hole, the Scotsman flighted a perfect bunker shot to 2 feet of the cup for a tap-in par, and he converted another par from the sand at the par-5 16th. The pressure and the pro-Scheffler sentiment certainly didn't seem to affect him. "It started on the first tee," MacIntyre said. "It probably started when I walked down to the range. It ain't bothering me. The tournament is likely down to MacIntyre, Scheffler and possibly Aberg, but for many here, the bigger chase is in the FedEx Cup standings. The top 30 players in points at the end of the tournament will advance to the Tour Championship next week. Akshay Bhatia – who had a hole-out eagle and a hole-in-one amid a round of 66 Saturday – is No. 28 in the live projections, Kim is No. 29 and South Korea's Sungjae Im is No. 30. The first man out in the projected standings is Chris Gotterup, followed by Fowler. "Not in a bad spot," Fowler said. "We obviously have a chance going into tomorrow. In a way, I'd much rather be on the outside looking in. I know what I need to go do, versus maybe being inside (the top 30) trying to protect type of thing." Bhatia's hole-in-one came at the 227-yard 17th hole. His 5-iron tee shot landed just short of the pin and rolled into the cup. "The wind was straight off the left, so it was a perfect 5-iron," Bhatia said. "I could draw it, which is nice. Again, that's a hole you're just trying to hit it front of the green to back of the green. But I told myself just don't be afraid to hit it, execute it, because it's easy to bail out there.


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Athletics-Thompson beats Lyles in Olympic final rematch in Silesia
SILESIA, Poland (Reuters) -Kishane Thompson laid down a marker ahead of next month's world championships when the Jamaican came out on top in the highly-anticipated 100 metres against Olympic champion Noah Lyles at the Silesia Diamond League meeting on Saturday. The men's sprint brought together American Lyles and Thompson for the first time since their unforgettable Olympic final last year in Paris, where Lyles beat his rival by five thousandths of a second. Add Kenny Bednarek into the mix, who recently clashed with Lyles, and this was a race that nobody wanted to miss. The two Americans had a heated moment at the U.S. Championships earlier this month, when Lyles stared down Bednarek coming to the line and received a shove in return at the finish. Thompson blasted out of the blocks and never looked like being beaten, while Lyles, with his typically slow start, came strong at the end but the Jamaican won in 9.87 seconds, with Lyles clocking 9.90, his season's best, and Bednarek finishing third. (Reporting by Trevor Stynes; editing by Clare Fallon)