Ryan Moore (pictured) and James Hahn fired six-under-par 65s to grab a one-shot lead after a low-scoring first round at the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston on Friday. Photo pga.com |
Golf
BOSTON - Ryan Moore and James Hahn fired six-under-par 65s to grab a one-shot lead after a low-scoring first round at the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston on September 2.
Hahn drained an eight-foot birdie putt on his final hole while
Brian Stuard,
Moore and Hahn opened up their slender advantage after recording bogey-free rounds with six birdies apiece on the demanding 7,207-yard layout.
World number 43 Moore is chasing his sixth PGA Tour title, just a month after winning the John Deere Classic by two shots.
The 33-year-old is 11th in the lucrative FedExCup standings could climb to second overall with a victory this weekend.
"It’s hard to say why that happens," said
Hahn meanwhile enjoyed a near flawless round, hitting every fairway in regulation for the first time in his professional career.
The 34-year-old Korean-born world number 65 is seeking the third win of his PGA Tour career, with the most recent victory coming at the Wells Fargo Championship in May.
Casey and Gomez had set the early pace in the morning flights, although Stuard briefly went to six under before faltering with back-to-back bogeys before finishing with a birdie.
World number two Dustin Johnson, number three Jordan Spieth,
Reed is well-positioned for a charge over the weekend as he looks to build on last week’s victory at The Barclays.
Defending Deutsche Bank champion and world number eight Rickie Fowler is four off the lead, tied for 38th, after carding four birdies and a pair of bogeys.
World number one Jason Day of
Ellie Day was taken to hospital as a precaution but later released.
"Thankfully everyone is now resting comfortably," said Day, who is tied for 48th with Fiji’s Vijay Singh and 2014 Deutsche Bank winner Chris Kirk among others.
But it was a miserable day for Phil Mickelson, who ended up carding a quadruple bogey at the 439-yard par four sixth hole. Mickelson finally finished 10 strokes off the lead, tied for 93rd. AFP