
Griffin shares Colonial lead, Aussie Vilips on the rise
Griffin shot a seven-under 63 in the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial on Friday to tie Matti Schmid for the second-round lead at 11 under.
They are two strokes ahead of first-round leader John Pak and five ahead of Fowler, who made the turn in 29 before settling for a 64.
Pak, the tour rookie who opened with a 63, birdied the par-4 18th for a 68 and was a shot ahead of Chris Gotterup, a one-time tour winner like Griffin.
Gotterup was eight under after a 65. Ryo Hisatsune, a 22-year-old from Japan, was another stroke back after a 67, tied with Akshay Bhatia (66).
Scottie Scheffler, who won the PGA Championship last weekend, shot 71 and was 10 shots off the lead as the world No.1 tries to become the first player since Dustin Johnson in 2017 to win three consecutive starts.
Scheffler made the cut with a shot to spare, which extended his streak to 55, second to Xander Schauffele's 64.
A month removed from teaming with Andrew Novak to win the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Griffin made eight birdies - seven from inside 10 feet - and saved par with a 12-foot putt from the fringe after his only bogey.
The 29-year-old has already matched his career best of five top-10 finishes from last year, including a tie for fifth at the PGA.
"I feel like I've kind of made good steps the last couple of years just kind of building to get to that first win," Griffin said.
"Now that I've got that first win, I feel like it's really freeing me up to come out and be not necessarily more aggressive, but just feel more aggressive, feel like I'm trying to win more. It's definitely been a breakthrough year, but I think there's more to come."
Young Karl Vilips moved 39 spots with his 66 on Friday. The winner of the 2025 Puerto Rico Open, Vilips had seven birdies and three bogeys and is now at four under.
The 23-year-old, who made four birdies in a row starting on the eighth, is the lone Australian in the field after Cam Davis missed the cut with rounds of 76 and 71.
Fowler has dropped to 127th in the world after being in the top 25 as recently as early 2024.
The 36-year-old followed an opening 70 with six birdies before finishing even over his final nine holes.
"It's definitely coming around," said Fowler. "Body is starting to feel better, and the game (has) been in a good spot and not very far off."
Schmid, a 27-year-old German seeking his first tour victory in his 79th start, has been bogey-free with 10 birdies over 24 holes since a double bogey on the par-4 12th in the opening round.
After his first bogey of the week on the par-4 seventh, Pak got to 10 under with birdies on three of the next four holes. Consecutive bogeys dropped him into a tie with Gotterup before Pak made a 13-footer on 18.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
10 hours ago
- Perth Now
FOLLOW LIVE: Fever take on Vixens for Super Netball crown
Well that puts to bed anyone's thought that this would be a walkover as the Vixens take the lead into the first break. Fever's defence has been on fire but they've been shaky in offence as the Vixens are doing everything to put body on Fowler-Nembhard. Both teams have coughed it up but that Rudy Ellis intercept gives the Vixens momentum into the first break. They've been trying to shoot from two-point range since the Power Five period started and they sink their first. TURNOVER! Fowler-Nembhard can't gather cleanly and Vixens captilse to hit the lead. FEV 15 VIX 17 The super shot is the Vixens clearest rode to victory. Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard has 12/12 to start Fever lead 12-10 Vixens are overusing the ball in attack and seem a bit gun-shy as a wayward pass goes out of bounds. This time, the Fever capitalise before Fowler-Nembhard shows great strength to stand tall and sink the shots. Fever lead 7-5. Jordan Cransberg sees one go through her hands as the Fever can't capitalise on Kadie-Ann Dehaney's gain. She's had two already but Fever haven't made the Vixens pay yet. We're tied up at 4-4. A nervous start for both teams as Fever turn it over before the Vixens turn it over in transition. Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard gets a contact-free and slots her first goal. The Vixens have the home crowd and also plenty of drive with this to be their coach, Simone McKinnis' last game in charge after announcing her retirement early this year. They also fell just short in last year's grand final and will be out to atone. Make no mistake they are a massively dangerous opposition regardless of the Fever's form. Hello all and welcome to the Super Netball grand final where the West Coast Fever are taking on the Melbourne Vixens at a sellout Rod Laver Arena. The Fever have won a record 13 straight games but this is the one that matters and they'll have to do it against a hostile home crowd. Can they keep their cool to claim just their second title? We'll find out shorty.


The Advertiser
19 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Young shades Rai for Wyndham lead, Aussie Scott falters
American Cameron Young has a one-stroke lead over defending champion Aaron Rai with play in the second round of the Wyndham Championship suspended by lightning. The PGA Tour's regular-season finale was halted on Friday afternoon with lightning in the area of the Sedgefield Country Club. The bad weather moved in as Australia's Adam Scott slipped down the leader board, likely dashing his chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. The round will resume on Saturday morning. Young and Rai were among those still on the course when play was called. Young had just birdied 14 and 15 to get to seven under for the round and 14 under for the tournament. Rai, from England, had six birdies through 13 holes completed. South Korea's Im Sung-jae shot 64 for the second straight day and shares the clubhouse lead with Mac Meissner at 12 under. Meissner fired a seven under 63 to climb the leaderboard. Mark Hubbard is alone in fifth at 11 under following a 66. After a strong first round, when he was just four shots off the lead, Scott fell back into a tie for 41st. He was one over for the second round through 14 holes to leave him four under for the tournament. The 45-year-old fired two birdies in a bright start to the front nine but matched that with two bogeys. A double bogey six at the 10th had him on the back foot before he scrambled a birdie at the 13th. Unless he can pull off something extraordinary, Scott will miss out on securing a spot in the playoffs starting next week. The Aussie needed to finish with a two-way tie for third or better to have a reason to fly to Memphis, something that was likely to require shooting 20 under in Greensboro. Meanwhile, fellow Australian Karl Vilips shot a three-under 67 in his completed second round to be tied for 22nd and six under for tournament. Joel Dahmen, the first-round leader thanks to a white-hot 61, was even par through 10 holes on Friday to remain at nine under. American Cameron Young has a one-stroke lead over defending champion Aaron Rai with play in the second round of the Wyndham Championship suspended by lightning. The PGA Tour's regular-season finale was halted on Friday afternoon with lightning in the area of the Sedgefield Country Club. The bad weather moved in as Australia's Adam Scott slipped down the leader board, likely dashing his chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. The round will resume on Saturday morning. Young and Rai were among those still on the course when play was called. Young had just birdied 14 and 15 to get to seven under for the round and 14 under for the tournament. Rai, from England, had six birdies through 13 holes completed. South Korea's Im Sung-jae shot 64 for the second straight day and shares the clubhouse lead with Mac Meissner at 12 under. Meissner fired a seven under 63 to climb the leaderboard. Mark Hubbard is alone in fifth at 11 under following a 66. After a strong first round, when he was just four shots off the lead, Scott fell back into a tie for 41st. He was one over for the second round through 14 holes to leave him four under for the tournament. The 45-year-old fired two birdies in a bright start to the front nine but matched that with two bogeys. A double bogey six at the 10th had him on the back foot before he scrambled a birdie at the 13th. Unless he can pull off something extraordinary, Scott will miss out on securing a spot in the playoffs starting next week. The Aussie needed to finish with a two-way tie for third or better to have a reason to fly to Memphis, something that was likely to require shooting 20 under in Greensboro. Meanwhile, fellow Australian Karl Vilips shot a three-under 67 in his completed second round to be tied for 22nd and six under for tournament. Joel Dahmen, the first-round leader thanks to a white-hot 61, was even par through 10 holes on Friday to remain at nine under. American Cameron Young has a one-stroke lead over defending champion Aaron Rai with play in the second round of the Wyndham Championship suspended by lightning. The PGA Tour's regular-season finale was halted on Friday afternoon with lightning in the area of the Sedgefield Country Club. The bad weather moved in as Australia's Adam Scott slipped down the leader board, likely dashing his chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. The round will resume on Saturday morning. Young and Rai were among those still on the course when play was called. Young had just birdied 14 and 15 to get to seven under for the round and 14 under for the tournament. Rai, from England, had six birdies through 13 holes completed. South Korea's Im Sung-jae shot 64 for the second straight day and shares the clubhouse lead with Mac Meissner at 12 under. Meissner fired a seven under 63 to climb the leaderboard. Mark Hubbard is alone in fifth at 11 under following a 66. After a strong first round, when he was just four shots off the lead, Scott fell back into a tie for 41st. He was one over for the second round through 14 holes to leave him four under for the tournament. The 45-year-old fired two birdies in a bright start to the front nine but matched that with two bogeys. A double bogey six at the 10th had him on the back foot before he scrambled a birdie at the 13th. Unless he can pull off something extraordinary, Scott will miss out on securing a spot in the playoffs starting next week. The Aussie needed to finish with a two-way tie for third or better to have a reason to fly to Memphis, something that was likely to require shooting 20 under in Greensboro. Meanwhile, fellow Australian Karl Vilips shot a three-under 67 in his completed second round to be tied for 22nd and six under for tournament. Joel Dahmen, the first-round leader thanks to a white-hot 61, was even par through 10 holes on Friday to remain at nine under. American Cameron Young has a one-stroke lead over defending champion Aaron Rai with play in the second round of the Wyndham Championship suspended by lightning. The PGA Tour's regular-season finale was halted on Friday afternoon with lightning in the area of the Sedgefield Country Club. The bad weather moved in as Australia's Adam Scott slipped down the leader board, likely dashing his chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. The round will resume on Saturday morning. Young and Rai were among those still on the course when play was called. Young had just birdied 14 and 15 to get to seven under for the round and 14 under for the tournament. Rai, from England, had six birdies through 13 holes completed. South Korea's Im Sung-jae shot 64 for the second straight day and shares the clubhouse lead with Mac Meissner at 12 under. Meissner fired a seven under 63 to climb the leaderboard. Mark Hubbard is alone in fifth at 11 under following a 66. After a strong first round, when he was just four shots off the lead, Scott fell back into a tie for 41st. He was one over for the second round through 14 holes to leave him four under for the tournament. The 45-year-old fired two birdies in a bright start to the front nine but matched that with two bogeys. A double bogey six at the 10th had him on the back foot before he scrambled a birdie at the 13th. Unless he can pull off something extraordinary, Scott will miss out on securing a spot in the playoffs starting next week. The Aussie needed to finish with a two-way tie for third or better to have a reason to fly to Memphis, something that was likely to require shooting 20 under in Greensboro. Meanwhile, fellow Australian Karl Vilips shot a three-under 67 in his completed second round to be tied for 22nd and six under for tournament. Joel Dahmen, the first-round leader thanks to a white-hot 61, was even par through 10 holes on Friday to remain at nine under.


Perth Now
19 hours ago
- Perth Now
Young shades Rai for Wyndham lead, Aussie Scott falters
American Cameron Young has a one-stroke lead over defending champion Aaron Rai with play in the second round of the Wyndham Championship suspended by lightning. The PGA Tour's regular-season finale was halted on Friday afternoon with lightning in the area of the Sedgefield Country Club. The bad weather moved in as Australia's Adam Scott slipped down the leader board, likely dashing his chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. The round will resume on Saturday morning. Young and Rai were among those still on the course when play was called. Young had just birdied 14 and 15 to get to seven under for the round and 14 under for the tournament. Rai, from England, had six birdies through 13 holes completed. South Korea's Im Sung-jae shot 64 for the second straight day and shares the clubhouse lead with Mac Meissner at 12 under. Meissner fired a seven under 63 to climb the leaderboard. Mark Hubbard is alone in fifth at 11 under following a 66. After a strong first round, when he was just four shots off the lead, Scott fell back into a tie for 41st. He was one over for the second round through 14 holes to leave him four under for the tournament. The 45-year-old fired two birdies in a bright start to the front nine but matched that with two bogeys. A double bogey six at the 10th had him on the back foot before he scrambled a birdie at the 13th. Unless he can pull off something extraordinary, Scott will miss out on securing a spot in the playoffs starting next week. The Aussie needed to finish with a two-way tie for third or better to have a reason to fly to Memphis, something that was likely to require shooting 20 under in Greensboro. Meanwhile, fellow Australian Karl Vilips shot a three-under 67 in his completed second round to be tied for 22nd and six under for tournament. Joel Dahmen, the first-round leader thanks to a white-hot 61, was even par through 10 holes on Friday to remain at nine under.