Henninger rockets to Reno lead
Associated Press
Friday, August 25
RENO, Nev. -- Brian Henninger matched the course record with a 9-under 63 to take a one-stroke lead Friday over Peter Jacobsen and Steve Flesch in the second round of the Reno-Tahoe
Open.
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| Henninger |
Henninger's bogey-free round included nine birdies, eight of those putts from 8 feet or closer. He has a 10-under 134 total.
Notah Begay III also shot a 63 last year en route to his victory on the 7,552-yard Montreux Golf and Country Club, the second longest course on the PGA Tour behind Castle Pines.
"You never know when these kinds of rounds are going to show up," said Henninger, 37, who had a second-round 63 en route to a tie for sixth place in the Western Open last month. "If you get a couple of these a year it's a lot of fun and today was one of them. I hit to within 10 to 15 feet of the pin a lot of the time today."
Henninger, whose career earnings total $2.5 million, won the Southern Farm Bureau Classic last year. He's 103rd on the money list this year with $354,558. The winner's check at Reno is worth $540,000.
Scott McCarron, who was tied for the lead after the first round with a 66, chipped in from 40 yards for an eagle on his last hole Friday for a 70, two strokes off the lead at 8-under along with Bob May and Mathew Goggin.
May, who lost a playoff to Tiger Woods at the PGA
Championship last week, birdied five holes for a 67 to go with his opening-round 69.
"There's a lot of golf to be played. I feel good about my position," May said.
David Toms shot a 65 to pull within three strokes of the lead, and Sergio Garcia rebounded from an even-par opening round with a 67 to move within striking distance at 5-under. Jean Van de Velde shot a 71 Friday to move to 6-under.
Garcia's 12-foot birdie attempt at the 18th lipped 360-degrees around the hole before missing.
"That was pretty unlucky," Garcia said. "One shot is a big difference going into the weekend. But I hit the ball better today and I putted pretty well."
McCarron played at UCLA and Henninger at rival Southern California, but they recently learned they were born in the same hospital, Sutter Memorial in Sacramento, Calif.
"Isn't that weird?" said Henninger, who now lives in Wilsonville, Ore. Their two families were headed to the beach at nearby Lake Tahoe Friday afternoon.
"Nice round, buddy," McCarron told Henninger as he entered the media tent. "Are you ready for some jet skis?"
Jacobsen, trying to win his first PGA Tour tournament since 1995, shot a 3-under 69 to go with Thursday's 66 and head to the third round at 9-under 135.
"I had some good putts for birdies that I didn't make," he said Friday. "It's a tight leaderboard, which is fun."
Flesch, who has won more than $1 million this year with seven top-10 finishes, followed his 67 in the first round with a 68 Friday. More than a dozen players were within five strokes of the lead.
"There's a lot of guys up there, so it's going to be an interesting weekend," Flesch said.
Jacobsen, whose Portland-based company is managing the tournament, also is a friend of Henninger. They play together out of Oregon Golf Club in the Portland area.
"Pound for pound, Brian may be the best player on Tour. He weighs as much as my right leg," Jacobsen said.
The PGA Tour guide lists Henninger at 5-foot-8, 155 pounds, but McCarron insisted he is "135 pounds dripping wet."
McCarron, who lives in Sacramento and has family in Reno, has a hometown gallery that let out a roar when he chipped in for an eagle at his last hole of the day, the 616-yard, par-5 ninth.
"I lipped out a lot of putts, a lot that looked like they were going in, so I feel I was owed that last one a little bit," he said.
Henninger said he was "pretty discouraged" by his opening-round 71 at Montreux and "slept like crap" Thursday night, worried that he'd miss his early tee time Friday because of road construction on the Mount Rose Highway between the golf course and his uncle's home at Lake Tahoe.
A two-time winner on the tour, Henninger shared the 54-hole lead with Ben Crenshaw at the Masters in 1995 before a closing 75 left him tied for 10th.
"That was early in my career. That was a huge adjustment," he said. "I probably got internally a little too excited about what it all meant, like I won the tournament after Saturday."