ap

Skip to content
Charley Hoffman has a three-shot lead after two rounds of the Deutsche Bank Championship.
Charley Hoffman has a three-shot lead after two rounds of the Deutsche Bank Championship.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

NORTON, mass. — In a year of first-ever feats for Jordan Spieth, the young Texan accomplished another Saturday at the Deutsche Bank Championship.

Only this one was nothing to celebrate.

Spieth didn’t make a birdie until the 18th hole, and by then it was too late. It salvaged a 3-over-par 74, not nearly enough to avoid missing the cut in consecutive events for the first time in his PGA Tour career.

“I’ve done a lot of things I’ve never done positively this year. This is something I’ve never done that’s negative,” Spieth said. “What- ever is going on … normally my mental game is a strength of mine. And it’s something I feel like I have an advantage over other players on. These past two weeks, it was a weakness for me.”

Charley Hoffman, who five years ago closed with a sizzling 62 to win at TPC Boston, made birdies on half his holes for an 8-under 63 that gave him a three-shot lead over Brendon de Jonge after 36 holes. Rickie Fowler (67) and British Open champion Zach Johnson (65) were another shot behind.

The second FedEx Cup playoff event nearly lost the top two players in the world.

Rory McIlroy, who returned to No. 1 last week without playing, needed a par on the final hole to make the cut on the number. He got up-and-down from a bunker and made a birdie for a 74, making it with one shot to spare.

PGA Championship winner Jason Day kept alive his hopes to be No. 1 for the first time with another 68 that left him in a tie for 10th place, six shots behind.

It was the fourth consecutive round over par for Spieth, his longest such streak since he went five consecutive rounds at the British Open and PGA Championship two years ago. And even though he missed a second straight cut, he could return to No. 1 if Day does not win and McIlroy finishes out of the top 10.

Whatever is going through Spieth’s mind, it didn’t help that he showed up Saturday at TPC Boston already 16 shots out of the lead.

Hoffman made a tap-in birdie on the par-3 11th hole early in his second round, and poured in four putts from the 12-foot range and three more from inside 5 feet.

He traded a bogey with a birdie at the end to reach 12-under 130 overall.

RevContent Feed

More in Sports