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Louis Oosthuizen sets 36-hole British Open record; Collin Morikawa is two back

Louis Oosthuizen acknowledges the crowd after making an eagle on No. 14 during the second round of the British Open.
Louis Oosthuizen acknowledges the crowd after making an eagle on No. 14 during the second round of the British Open. He shot a five-under 65 for a two-stroke lead.
(Peter Morrison / Associated Press)
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Louis Oosthuizen set a 36-hole record at the British Open and is halfway to ending that run of near misses at the majors.

Now all he has to do is hold off a cast of major champions on the weekend at Royal St. George’s.

On a day of pleasant summer weather that took the fear out of the links off Sandwich Bay, Oosthuizen broke away from a three-way tie with a birdie-birdie-eagle run from the 12th hole. He shrugged off his first bogey of the week for a five-under-par 65 and a two-stroke lead Friday.

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Former PGA champion Collin Morikawa had a 64 in the morning and was two strokes behind. Another shot back was Jordan Spieth (67), going after his fourth major.

Lurking was two-time major champion Dustin Johnson, the No. 1 player in the world who shot a 65 and was tied for fourth, four strokes behind Oosthuizen.

“The game is good, but I know it’s a really good leaderboard,” Oosthuizen said. “I’ll have to play good golf this weekend if I want to come out first.”

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Oosthuizen, looking as calm as the conditions, was at 11-under 129, breaking the 36-hole Open record first set by Nick Faldo in 1992 at Muirfield and matched by Brandt Snedeker in 2012 at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

This will be the fifth time in the last nine rounds at a major that Oosthuizen, the 2010 Open champion at St. Andrews, has had at least a share of the lead. He was runner-up at the last two majors — to Phil Mickelson at the the PGA Championship in May and to Jon Rahm at the U.S. Open last month.

“I’m not really going to think about the second spots,” said Oosthuizen, when asked what he will do differently this time. “I know my game is in a good place.”

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He also will be aware of the quality of player behind him, though.

Morikawa, a former La Cañada High star making quite a debut in links golf, made seven birdies in his first 14 holes as part of a clinic in iron play. He missed a five-foot par putt on No. 15 — ending a 27-hole stretch without a bogey — and had a 10-foot birdie putt on the final hole catch the lip.

Collin Morikawa talks to his caddie on the 18th tee during the second round of the British Open.
Collin Morikawa talks to his caddie on the 18th tee. Morikawa, a former La Cañada High standout, shot a six-under 64 and is two off the lead.
(Peter Morrison / Associated Press)

Spieth, four strokes behind Morikawa when he teed off, was tied for the lead after 12 holes and then played the last six holes in one over, a stretch he described as “frustrating.” He had plenty of looks at birdie, but the putts didn’t drop like they did Thursday.

“I don’t know, I think I need to bring more food on the golf course tomorrow,” said Spieth, who has already lifted the Claret Jug before at Royal Birkdale in 2017. “I got really just in a weird head space, like fatigued there on like the 13th green as we were waiting and hitting putts.”

Then there was Johnson, a runner-up at Royal St. George’s in 2011, who stuck his approach at the last to three feet for a birdie and a round of 65, which left him at seven under with Dylan Frittelli of South Africa (67) and Scottie Scheffler (66).

The weather is expected to stay benign over the weekend, potentially favoring Johnson if the fairways firm up and the ball runs longer and faster.

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“I feel like I’m in a good position heading into the weekend,” he said.

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One shot behind an eclectic mix of players at six under — including two more South Africans in Justin Harding and Daniel Van Tonder as well as Germany’s Marcel Siem, who qualified from a second-tier Challenge Tour event last week — were Rahm (64) and Brooks Koepka.

Koepka, a four-time major winner and seemingly always in contention at golf’s biggest events, made four birdies in his last five holes for a 66, then continued his petty feud with Bryson DeChambeau with perhaps the best shot of his round.

During a television interview, Koepka said he was driving it great, adding: “I love my driver” — a clear nod at DeChambeau, who complained Thursday that his driver “sucks.”

DeChambeau doesn’t look like being a factor this weekend at Royal St. George’s, but he’s sticking around after shooting a 70, which saw him make the cut on the number at one over.

Rory McIlroy will be too, needing a birdie on the final hole for another 70. He was 11 shots behind and set to stay on four majors until 2022.

“That’s sort of been the way for the last couple months,” McIlroy said. “It’s felt close, but it just hasn’t quite been close enough.”

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Other big names weren’t so lucky: No. 7 Patrick Cantlay, a former UCLA standout; No. 9 Patrick Reed; and former Open champions Francesco Molinari and Henrik Stenson were among those headed home.

A sign of the favorable weather that has confronted the world’s best players this week — there was barely a drop of wind at times Friday — is the fact the cut was at one-over 141. The previous lowest cut at Royal St. George’s was 143.

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