Defending champion Brooks Koepka completed the lowest 36-hole showing in major golf history Friday to seize a record seven-stroke lead after two rounds of the PGA Championship while Tiger Woods missed the cut.
Third-ranked Koepka, a runaway favorite to capture his fourth major title on Sunday, fired a five-under par 65 Friday at Bethpage Black to stand on 12-under 128.
His devastating two-day performance produced the largest halfway lead in modern major golf history. The biggest prior 36-hole PGA lead had been Zimbabwean Nick Price's five-shot edge in 1994. And Koepka was disappointed in two bogeys that cost him an even tighter stranglehold.
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“Today was a battle. I was fighting,” Koepka said. “I feel good, especially the way I battled today. I fought hard. I feel great. Just need to continue on the weekend.”
The lowest prior halfway score in major golf history was 130, managed five times, including by American Gary Woodland at last year's PGA. Koepka, who set the course record with a 63 on Thursday, birdied three of the first four holes and four of the last six Friday to complete the most overpowering start even seen in major golf.
“I'm still putting very well,” he said. “I'm still hitting my lines and reading my putts very well.”
If he does claim the Wanamaker Trophy and a $1.98 million top prize, he'll be the first man to defend US Open and PGA titles in his career and the first to own back-to-back titles in two majors at the same time. He'd be the first to the defend the PGA title since Woods in 2007.