Second round: Reavie sits on top after 36 holes

text size
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size
reavie_top.jpg
Getty Images
Chez Reavie matched the tournament's 36-hole scoring record with his 13-under 129.
Email This Story Print This Story RSS
Jul. 26, 2008

OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) -- Chez Reavie picked up a stroke before he even got to Glen Abbey for the third round of the RBC Canadian Open.

Actually, probably before he got out of bed Saturday.

"I'm tired," Reavie said Friday after playing 33 holes to take a two-stroke lead over Eric Axley in the suspended second round. At about 7:45 a.m., that lead went to three when Axley finished his round with a bogey.

"I played really well and I felt fine on the last hole, but when I signed my scorecard I could kind of feel the energy just kind of leave my body."

Reavie was 13 under Friday after opening play Thursday with three straight pars. He finished the rain-delayed first round with a 6-under 65 and had a 64 in the second.

"I got to keep my momentum and just keep playing all day," said Reavie, playing for the sixth straight week. "This is by far my best start. I've been hitting the ball real well all year, but I haven't been scoring real well."

At 13-under 129 the 26-year-old PGA TOUR rookie matched the tournament record for the first 36 holes set by Scott Dunlap in 1996 when Glen Abbey played to a par of 72. The 129 total also matched the best on the PGA TOUR this year.

Axley, one of 63 players unable to finish the second round, was 11 under with a hole left when play was suspended because of darkness, but dropped a stroke on the par-4 ninth for a 67. Brian Davis and Nicholas Thompson were four strokes back at 9 under. They both returned to the course early to play one hole. Davis birdied the 18th for a 64, and Thompson finished with a par on No. 9 for a 66.

Bands of rain showers moved in soon after the second round finished, flooding bunkers and some fairways on the course saturated by 8 inches of rain in a week.

Anthony Kim, tied for 26th at 4 under through 15 holes when play was suspended Friday night, went birdie-birdie-eagle for a 69 to get to 8 under. After playing the front nine in 5-over 40, he shot a 7-under 29 on the back nine.

Billy Mayfair (66), Steve Marino (67) and Briny Baird (65) also were 8 under. Baird played five holes Saturday morning, while Mayfair and Marino finished Friday.

Mike Weir, part of a tournament-record, seven-man tie for the first-round lead after a bogey-free 65 Thursday morning, was even par for 16 holes Friday, then birdied the 18th Saturday for a 70. The Canadian star was 7 under.

"There's tons of golf left," Weir said.

To read the remainder of this story, click here.

TRIVIA QUESTION
trivia_question This year marks the 99th playing of the Canadian Open, the second oldest non-major championship on the PGA TOUR. Who was the last Canadian to win the national championship? See the answer at the bottom of the page
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
Chez Reavie liked the shot from the moment it left his club and rightfully so, since his third at the par-5 13th bounced once on the green then landed in the hole. At the time, the eagle moved him to 12 under for the day and extended his lead to four strokes.
VIDEO: Watch his shot.
Of the players who finished, Chez Reavie shot the lowest second-round score. His 7-under 64 not only moved him into the lead but it also matched his career-low round on the PGA TOUR -- an 8-under-par 64 in Round 2 of the 2004 Michelin Championship at Las Vegas, his first TOUR start.
MORE: Check out his scorecard
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I hit the ball great for 27 holes, you know, and all of a sudden I started hitting it sideways, and it was kind of like, where did this come from? I asked my caddie after the second double, I said, 'What do you think is going on?' He said, 'I just think you're hitting a lot of crappy shots back-to-back.'" -- Sean O'Hair, on the pep talk he received from his caddie after making two double bogeys to start his final nine on Friday. O'Hair birdied three of his next four holes after he and his caddie shared a laugh.

BIRDIES LIFT SLUMPING O'HAIR
By Dave Perkins, Special to PGATOUR.COM

OAKVILLE, Ont. -- Sean O'Hair has done something so far in the rain-interrupted RBC Canadian Open that he hasn't done a lot of this year on the PGA TOUR. He has made birdies in bunches.

ohair.jpg
O'Hair

O'Hair, a 26-year-old native of Lubbock, Texas, fashioned eight birdies against two bogeys over Glen Abbey to grab a share of the tournament's first-round lead at 6-under-par 65, then overcame a pair of consecutive double bogeys with four more birdies in a second round of par 71, leaving him within hailing distance of runaway leader Chez Reavie.

Reavie, a PGA TOUR rookie, led by four shots over Billy Mayfair and Steve Marino (each 134) late in his second round in brilliant sunshine with the golf course slowly drying out after several days of occasionally intense rain.

O'Hair, with a 36-hole total of 136, was 6 under, level with Mark Calcavechhia and a shot behind Carlos Franco and Ken Duke, each at 135. Canada's favorite golfing son, Mike Weir, plus first-round co-leaders Eric Axley and Anthony Kim, teed off late in the day and were due to finish their second rounds Saturday morning.

All those birdies represent a buffet for O'Hair, who stands 203rd this season on the PGA TOUR in birdies, averaging 2.62 per round. Still, he has made his best shots count, assembling a victory, in the PODS Championship, plus a tie for third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard, and sits 24th in the FedExCup standings.

To read the remainder of this story, click here.

WHO IS CHEZ REAVIE?

A past U.S. Public Links champion. Joining the likes of Tim Clark (1997), Trevor Immelman (1998), D.J. Trahan (2000) and more recently Brandt Snedeker (2003) and Ryan Moore (2002, 2004), Reavie won in 2001 at Pecan Valley G.C., in San Antonio, Texas.

reavie.jpg
Reavie

A Nationwide Tour grad. In 2007, Reavie notched 10 top-25s on the Nationwide Tour and captured his first title at the Knoxville Open. By finishing 18th on the Money List, Reavie was able to advance to the PGA TOUR in 2008.

A Sun Devil. Reavie played on the same college golf team at Arizona State University with Jeff Quinney, Matt Jones and Jin Park.

A rookie. In his first full season on the PGA TOUR, Reavie's best finish has been a tie for fifth at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic at the start of the year.

A car enthusiast. "I've always liked cars, fast cars and expensive cars," Reavie told PGATOUR.COM freelance writer Rudy Klancnik. Wonder what kind of car he'd buy if he earned the big paycheck this week?

To learn more about Reavie, click here.

What the clubhouse leaders said...
Player Position Score Comment
Chez Reavie 1 13 under "This is by far my best start. I've been hitting the ball real well all year, I haven't been scoring real well, whether it's been putting or making a few birdies and then making a double bogey or something, I've just lost my momentum. Today fortunately I got to play 36 and I had some momentum and I was making putts, so it paid off."
Billy Mayfair T4 8 under "I'm driving the ball real well, driving it in the fairways, hitting good iron shots. When you do that, you're going to have a lot of birdie putts and you're not going to work too hard. That kind of goes with the steady-Eddie right there. I really started hitting it good last week when I was home in Phoenix, and it's kind to followed up to this week."
Steve Marino T4 8 under "What I haven't been doing well is driving the ball straight, and then I didn't drive it straight -- like I played six holes yesterday. I was driving it crooked. Then I came out this morning, and all of a sudden I started driving it long and straight."

TRAFFIC JAM AT THE TOP

jason_day.jpg
Day

When Round 1 wrapped up at 12:31 p.m. ET on Friday afternoon, there was a seven-way tie at the top of the leaderboard. In the 99-year history of the event, that's the most players to share the lead after the first round.

The previous biggest logjam after 18 holes came in 2001 at The Royal Montreal GC when four players -- Tiger Woods, Jim McGovern, Matt Gogel and Michael Muehr -- shared the lead.

Here's what the leaderboard looked like as the first round concluded:

Position Player Rd. 1 score (Relation to par)
T1 Eric Axley 65 (-6)
T1 Mike Weir 65 (-6)
T1 Anthony Kim 65 (-6)
T1 John Huston 65 (-6)
T1 Sean O'Hair 65 (-6)
T1 Jason Day 65 (-6)
T1 Chez Reavie 65 (-6)
T8 John Senden 66 (-5)
T8 Scott McCarron 66 (-5)

OFF TO A GOOD START

When Billy Mayfair birdied the par-4 9th hole (his final one of the day), he capped off a second-round 66. That tied his previous lowest round of the '08 season, a year in which Mayfair tied for second at the PODS Championship in March and tied for fourth at the Shell Houston Open a month later but hasn't finished inside the top 10 since.

billy_mayfair.jpg
Mayfair

Mayfair is making his 13th appearance in the Canadian Open and his two-round score represents his best 36-hole score. His best finish came in 1991 when he tied for 14th at Glen Abbey.

"I like Glen Abbey. When I saw in back on the schedule, I obviously put the tournament back on my schedule. Nothing against other golf courses, but I played here when it was here every year. I don't know how many times I've been here, but I've played it year after year after year, and I enjoyed coming here," said Mayfair, who could earn his sixth TOUR victory this week.

"I like the area, I like the setup. I like the golf course. I'm not real fond of the holes down in the valley, but I played them good this year."

BY THE NUMBERS
19Number of Canadians playing this week.
6Number of Canadians currently above the cutline.
14Position on the leaderboard of the highest ranked Canadian (Mike Weir).

Mayfair made six birdies and one bogey in his second round. He also hit 86 percent of his fairways during Round 2 and has hit the green in regulation 77.8 percent of the time this week.

Currently 81st in the FedExCup standings, Mayfair understands the importance of finishing strong before the start of the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup.

"Last year was a great example. I finished second in Greensboro a week before it started and I jumped from 70th to up to about 30th or 40th, it let me in the first three and I tried to get in the fourth one (THE TOUR Championship), which I wasn't able to," Mayfair said. "But it jump-started me in getting me into the Playoffs.

"I think that's what a lot of guys are trying to do right now. They're trying to position themselves for when the Playoffs start, which is kind of a neat idea."

THINGS TO WATCH ON SATURDAY

1. The cut.
The players who didn't finish their second round on Friday will have to return on Saturday morning at 7:30 a.m. Currently the cutline sits at 1 under.

2. Anthony Kim. What a roller-coaster start for the young star. He made double bogey on his first hole of the second round, then followed that up with three more bogeys in the next six holes. But right before play was suspended, Kim birdied the 11th and made eagle on No. 13. He has three holes left on Saturday.

3. Eric Axley. He only has one hole to go on Saturday morning and Axley was 5 under in his second round. He sits just two strokes behind Reavie and could move within a shot before the third round begins.

TRIVIA ANSWER
trivia_question Pat Fletcher in 1954. Fletcher became the first Canadian to win since 1914 at the Canadian Open in 1954, earning his historic win at Point Grey Golf Club in Vancouver. The late Fletcher eventually become the head professional at Royal Montreal Golf Club and was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.
Email This Story   Print This Story   RSS   Bookmark and Share
SHOP.PGATOUR.COM

Get the best deals on the best equipment all at the SHOP.PGATOUR.COM.

WATCH LIVE

WATCH LIVE
© 1995-2008 PGA TOUR, Inc. | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. PGA TOUR, Champions Tour, Nationwide Tour and the swinging golfer logo are registered trademarks.
TurnerPGATOUR.com is part of the Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network