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The 154th Open

Flying high

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Lucas Herbert leads at halfway stage of The 154th Open

Lucas Herbert during his second round at Royal Birkdale

Prior to Friday at The 154th Open, there had been just five rounds of 62 at men’s majors. By the time the final putt had landed, that number had climbed to seven.

Lucas Herbert and Sam Burns were the players to join an illustrious list on a remarkable day of low scoring at Royal Birkdale, which was also the venue when Branden Grace became the founding member of the exclusive 62 club.

Herbert, who was a missed five-foot putt on the 18th away from becoming the first man to card a 61 in one of golf’s showpiece events, shot to the summit and will begin the weekend on eight-under-par.

Jackson Suber, the overnight leader after round one, is two shots adrift alongside compatriots Cameron Young and Ryan Gerard, while Burns was joined by Si Woo-Kim at five-under.

Bryson DeChambeau is also five-under heading into the weekend. He was assessed a two-stroke penalty under Rule 8.1 on the 5th hole, meaning his score for round two was a two-under 68.

Grant Moir, Chief Referee, The Open, said: "I would reiterate this rule applies even when there's no intention to improve the area, as was the case with Bryson."

Home hero Tommy Fleetwood, along with Matt Wallace, Robert MacIntyre and Alex Fitzpatrick lead the British charge a shot further back, while a raft of big names remain in reach with the leaderboard intriguingly poised.

Lucas Herbert with caddie Nick Pugh at Royal Birkdale

Herbert hits the front

The tone was set early by Herbert, who birdied each of his first three holes in an eye-catching start.

He admitted afterwards that his approach to five feet on the 3rd was when he began dreaming of something special and his momentum continued from there.

A monster putt from 35 feet gave him the lead at 7, while another birdie at 9 saw him equal an Open record for the lowest-ever front nine, matching the 28 recorded by Denis Durnian here in 1983.

A staggering sub-60 looked achievable when he picked up shots at 11 and 12, with a ninth birdie arriving at the 16th. Two pars and a place in the history books was his.

But The Open is never that simple. Having dramatically saved par at 17 thanks to a deft chip from the rough, he went a long way right off the tee at 18.

Herbert recovered to set up a five-footer but whether it was the weight of the potential achievement or just his first misread of the day, the ball did not do the necessary.

The disappointment was etched on his face but the pride remains – and as he put it, ‘it is a good problem to have to be disappointed with a 62’.

The lead is his to lose.

Burns blitz part of Stateside charge

All eyes were on Herbert but two groups behind him, Burns was quietly putting together a record-equalling round of his own.

The 29-year-old, ranked 18th in the world, had all-but withdrawn from The 154th Open with his wife due to give birth in the middle of July.

But baby Belle arrived early, Burns’ name had been kept in the hat by his agent and now the new father is in the thick of the race for the Claret Jug.

He caught fire after the turn on Friday, with six birdies down the stretch including each of the last three holes.

His 62 was sealed in fitting fashion, a glorious chip-in from a greenside bunker at the 18th ensuring Herbert had company.

Plenty of Burns’ compatriots are also prominent in the chasing pack.

DeChambeau has managed 10 birdies in his opening two rounds, following five on Thursday with five more on Friday, and at three shots back has the firepower to mount a serious challenge this weekend.

Suber, who shot to prominence with his opening-day 65, started like a man far from overawed with his status as the overnight leader and birdied the 2nd.

Three consecutive bogeys followed as he began to falter but the 26-year-old, still in his first week of links golf, showed admirable character to battle back with four birdies after the turn on his way to a one-under round of 69.

Young and Gerard have been rewarded for consistency so far, with back-to-back rounds of 67 putting the pair within two of the lead. The former, second at St Andrews in 2022, has given himself a chance of going one better.

Scheffler carded a second successive 68 which could have been even better but for some frustration on the greens. He was leading by the halfway stage on his way to lifting the Claret Jug last year and will have to play catch-up this time – and you wouldn’t bet against him doing just that, just four off the lead.

Bud Cauley is alongside the world number one on four-under but Belgium’s Thomas Detry, Italy’s 2018 Champion Francesco Molinari, at the same mark, and South Korea’s Si Woo-Kim, a shot better off after five birdies down a brilliant back nine, ensure there is a worldwide feel to the challengers.

Fleetwood leads home charge

As the shadows grew longer, Fleetwood made his move.

The home favourite was one-under-par stood on the 14th tee and in need of a spark.

A birdie there provided it, and he followed up with two more as the roars grew louder. 

When he pinned his approach within 15 feet at the last, the grandstands at 18 dared to dream of a cherry on the top. He had to settle for par but is nicely poised at four-under.

MacIntyre sparked a similar noise when he eagled the 17th to move to five-under.

A bogey at the last checked his momentum but the Scot hailed a ‘great round’ and is confident of pushing hard over his final two rounds.

Wallace flew out the traps with three birdies in his first six holes, taking advantage of benign early morning conditions, and finished with a 67. Fitzpatrick carded the same score and sits alongside Fleetwood as the highest-placed Englishmen at the halfway stage.

Rory McIlroy improved, a three-under-par 67 taking him into the red on one-under, but his playing partner Matt Fitzpatrick missed the cut on four-over. Justin Rose (+3) and Aaron Rai (+2) were other home favourites who made an early exit.

Also missing from the weekend’s cards will be all 10 amateurs. Mason Howell, who finished two-over, was the highest-placed of them but as in 2025, there will be no Silver Medal handed out.

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