Jerry Kelly (72) leads as only player under par at difficult Senior Players
AKRON, Ohio – Jerry Kelly was the only player at par or better after two days on Firestone’s difficult South Course in the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship, the PGA Tour Champions’ first major of the season.
“You get out of position here, you’re in deep trouble, and that’s what it’s like in a major,” Kelly said. “That’s why I haven’t done that well in that many majors. It’s definitely harder to get back in position.”
Kelly shot an even-par-72 on Friday in tricky wind conditions to remain 2 under, three strokes ahead of fellow Madison, Wisconsin, player Steve Stricker, Colin Montgomerie, Rod Pampling and Robert Karlsson,
“The first day I turned a 64 into a 68 and today I turned an 80 into a 70,” Kelly said. “I didn’t strike it very well today. I didn’t hit fairways like I normally do, so I think if I get back to hitting the fairways, it’s a very playable golf course. But it seemed weird the way the holes were shaped and the way the wind was blowing.”
Kelly started the back nine with a bogey on the par-4 10th, birdied the par-3 11th, chipped in for par on the par-3 12th and made another bogey on the par-4 13th.
Full-field scores from the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship
“The chip-in on 12, that was awesome,” Kelly said. “I saved great bogeys. On 13 and 10, those were good bogeys.”
Montgomerie matched the best round of the day with a 69 on the testing course that was the longtime site of a PGA Tour event and later a World Golf Championship tournament.
“I don’t so much see it as a challenge, to be honest, I see it as the way it should be,” Montgomerie said. “It’s a major championship, and it should be more than a challenge. You know what I mean? It’s one of these courses you get rewarded for good play. On these courses you get heavily penalized for not. There is no way out.”
Karlsson shot 71, and Stricker and Pampling had 73s. Stricker closed with a bogey.
“It’s a challenge,” Stricker said. “I’m not hitting it all that great, so it makes it even more of a challenge. If you don’t get it in the fairway, you have some sort of shot underneath a tree to try to get it up around the green and try to get it up-and-down. I think I’ve only hit nine greens each day, which going around here, that’s not very good. I’m struggling a little bit, but I think everybody is. It’s just a difficult course.”
Miguel Angel Jimenez (74), Tom Gillis (71), Scott Parel (71), Shaun Micheel (71), Dicky Pride (71), Mike Weir (70) and Woody Austin (69) were 2 over. Bernhard Langer (73) was another stroke back.