4 in the world, and 13th-ranked Will Zalatoris both 70. The field includes five players in the top 20, and Finau was the only one of them to fare well in the first round.ĭefending FedEx Cup champion Patrick Cantlay, ranked No. “That’s probably going to end up being one of my favorite hole-in-ones," said Hubbard, who has nine career aces. The ball landed on the front of the green and rolled toward the cup before going around it and dropping in. “That's embarrassing," he said while the ball was in flight.
Hubbard dropped his club and his head after hitting his tee shot. Mark Hubbard was also four shots off the lead after a topsy-turvy round with four birdies, two bogeys and an ace on the par-3, 216-yard 11th hole. “I'm having surgery next week," he said, adding he will need four to six weeks to recover. Nate Lashley, who won his first and only PGA Tour title in Detroit four years ago, shot a 68 after getting an anti-inflammatory shot in his right foot. “When I’m healthy, I can compete with the best," Pendrith said. He has bounced back with ties for 11th and 13th at tournaments earlier this month. The injury prevented him from competing for nearly four months, leading to him being ranked No. In March, he was 13th at the Players Championship and came away with a career-best $327,222 - and a broken rib. The Canadian did have the third-round lead by three shots last October at the Bermuda Championship before closing with a 76 and finishing a career-high fifth.
Pendrith is atop a leaderboard for the first time on the PGA Tour following an opening round. “That's all that matters," he said with a grin. Toward the end of his round, the relatively anonymous player in the world noticed the ‘h' in his last name was missing on the leaderboard.Īlas, the 8 under next to his misspelled name was correct. Pendrith, a 31-year-old PGA Tour rookie, surged into a share of the lead with five birdies in a seven-hole stretch on his back nine. “It was nice to just get a bonus birdie on 8 after a poor wedge shot, but that’s why we call our putter the equalizer," Finau said. On the par-4 eighth hole, he made a 41-foot putt downhill with a slight break from right to left for another birdie and a three-shot lead. “Obviously, 64′s a very good round, but this is a golf course where a lot of guys are going to make birdies." “Do the math, I missed 10 putts," he said. He hit all 18 greens in regulation for the first time in 728 PGA Tour stroke-play rounds. Si Woo Kim and Kurt Kitayama, both ranked among the top 70 in the world, were in the pack at 67.įinau, who rallied from a five-shot deficit with 11 holes left to win the 3M Open by three shots Sunday in Minnesota, opened with a birdie and had five birdies on his front nine.Īfter cooling off with four straight pars, Finau closed with his seventh and eighth birdies in a bogey-free round. Open champion Webb Simpson, Michael Thompson, Cameron Champ, Lee Hodges and Matt Wallace were two shots back. In the afternoon, the wind picked up and the scores did as well.įormer U.S. The leaderboard was filled with players who took advantage of favorable scoring conditions with morning tee times. “I had to get all of it to get it to the hole and hit it right in the middle of the green,” he said. The pivotal shot on Finau's 16th hole, a 560-yard par 5, set up a two-putt from 43 feet for one of his eight birdies. The way he has been playing over the last week, it made a lot of sense.įinau, coming off his third career victory on the PGA Tour, and Taylor Pendrith shared the first-round lead at 8-under 64 on Thursday in the Rocket Mortgage Classic. DETROIT (AP) - Tony Finau sent an approach from 250 yards soaring over trees and onto the seventh green at Detroit Golf Club, going for the reward and ignoring the risk with a difficult shot.