How much money each PGA Tour player earned at Rocket Mortgage Classic

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Cam Davis.

The 26-year-old from Sydney, Australia, earned his first PGA Tour win on Sunday evening, claiming the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club in Michigan after a five-hole playoff.

Davis finished eagle-birdie to force a three-way playoff at 18 under with Joaquin Niemann and Troy Merritt. Niemann made his first bogey of the week on the first playoff hole, while Merritt forced the playoff to five holes. The win earns Davis a whopping $1,350,000.

Check out how much money each player earned this week at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. Here’s the top 18 money winner’s of all time.

Rocket Mortgage Classic: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

Position Player Score Winnings
T1 Cameron Davis -18 $1,350,000
T1 Troy Merritt -18 $667,500
T1 Joaquin Niemann -18 $667,500
T4 Hank Lebioda -17 $337,500
T4 Alexander Noren -17 $337,500
T6 Brandon Hagy -16 $262,500
T6 Bubba Watson -16 $262,500
T8 Mark Anderson -15 $211,875
T8 Sung-jae Im -15 $211,875
T8 Kevin Kisner -15 $211,875
T8 Seamus Power -15 $211,875
T12 Chris Kirk -14 $166,875
T12 Jason Kokrak -14 $166,875
T14 Keegan Bradley -13 $121,875
T14 Jason Day -13 $121,875
T14 Fabian Gomez -13 $121,875
T14 Mackenzie Hughes -13 $121,875
T14 Pat Perez -13 $121,875
T14 Cameron Tringale -13 $121,875
T14 Kevin Tway -13 $121,875
T21 Joel Dahmen -12 $81,750
T21 Maverick McNealy -12 $81,750
T21 Roger Sloan -12 $81,750
T21 Curtis Thompson -12 $81,750
T25 Lanto Griffin -11 $56,411
T25 Max Homa -11 $56,411
T25 Beau Hossler -11 $56,411
T25 Patton Kizzire -11 $56,411
T25 Tom Lewis -11 $56,411
T25 Scott Stallings -11 $56,411
T25 Richy Werenski -11 $56,411
T32 Rickie Fowler -10 $41,875
T32 Doug Ghim -10 $41,875
T32 Bo Hoag -10 $41,875
T32 Sean O’Hair -10 $41,875
T32 Patrick Reed -10 $41,875
T32 J.J. Spaun -10 $41,875
T38 Henrik Norlander -9 $34,125
T38 Brandt Snedeker -9 $34,125
T38 Robert Streb -9 $34,125
T41 Aaron Baddeley -8 $24,116
T41 Michael Gellerman -8 $24,116
T41 Michael Gligic -8 $24,116
T41 Lucas Glover -8 $24,116
T41 Garrick Higgo -8 $24,116
T41 Russell Knox -8 $24,116
T41 Nelson Lautaro Ledesma -8 $24,116
T41 Cameron Percy -8 $24,116
T41 Patrick Rodgers -8 $24,116
T41 Adam Schenk -8 $24,116
T41 Kyle Stanley -8 $24,116
T52 Scott Brown -7 $17,775
T52 Tyler Duncan -7 $17,775
T52 Chesson Hadley -7 $17,775
T52 Matt Jones -7 $17,775
T52 Anirban Lahiri -7 $17,775
T52 Nick Taylor -7 $17,775
T58 Chris Baker -6 $16,575
T58 Jonas Blixt -6 $16,575
T58 Kramer Hickok -6 $16,575
T58 Si Woo Kim -6 $16,575
T58 Matthew NeSmith -6 $16,575
T58 Davis Thompson -6 $16,575
T58 Vincent Whaley -6 $16,575
T58 Matthew Wolff -6 $16,575
T58 Josh Teater -6 $16,575
T67 Ryan Brehm -5 $15,600
T67 Sebastian Munoz -5 $15,600
T67 Camilo Villegas -5 $15,600
T67 Danny Willett -5 $15,600
T71 Willie Mack III -4 $15,075
T71 Bo Van Pelt -4 $15,075
T71 Jimmy Walker -4 $15,075
T74 Sung-Hoon Kang -3 $14,700
T74 Phil Mickelson -3 $14,700
76 Byeong-Hun An -2 $14,475
77 Will Zalatoris E $14,325

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Winner’s Bag: Cameron Davis, Rocket Mortgage Classic

A complete list of the golf equipment Cameron Davis used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic

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The golf equipment Cameron Davis used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic:

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (9 degrees), with UST Mamiya LIN-Q White 7 shaft (Buy a Titleist TSi3 driver from $549 at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TS3 (15 degrees), with Fujikura ATMOS Blue Tour Spec 8 TX shaft

IRONS: Titleist T200 prototype (2), 620 MB (4-PW), with KBS Tour-V 120X shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (52, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts
(Buy Titleist Vokey Design SM8 wedges from $159 at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Timeless 2 prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x
(Buy Titleist ProV1 golf balls from $50 per dozen at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

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Cam Davis earns first PGA Tour win in five-hole playoff at Rocket Mortgage Classic

Davis won the Rocket Mortgage Classic for his first win on Tour.

Another week on the PGA Tour, another playoff.

Five players were tied for the lead at 17 under when Troy Merritt and Joaquin Niemann, the last group of the day, stood on the 17th tee during the final round of the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic. Niemann and Merritt each made birdie on 17th and par on the 18th while Cam Davis finished eagle-birdie to force a three-way playoff at 18 under.

Niemann made his first bogey of the week on the first playoff hole, No. 18, and was eliminated while Merritt and Davis made par to advance. Both then made par on the second (15th) and third (16th) playoff holes before a pair of birdies on the par-5 14th sent the tournament back to No. 15, the fifth playoff hole.

Rocket Mortgage Classic: Leaderboard | Photos

In the end it was Davis who came out on top for the win with a par, his first on the PGA Tour. Davis has two other professional wins to his name. In 2017 he won the Emirates Australian Open on the PGA Tour of Australasia and in 2018 he won the Nashville Golf Open on the Korn Ferry Tour (then Web.com).

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Column: Bryson DeChambeau owes the Rocket Mortgage Classic — and Detroit — a lot more than silence

Walking off the course at the marquee sports event for your sponsor without saying a word as the defending champ? I don’t get it.

DETROIT — This, I don’t get.

I get a lot of things about Bryson DeChambeau.

I get that he’s trying to solve golf through the sports science of crazy swing speeds and an even crazier diet of 6,000 calories a day.

I get that he likes attention and likes to spin narratives as much as he likes the spin rate on his golf balls.

But walking off the course at the marquee sports event for your sponsor without saying a single word as the defending champion after two rounds?

This, I don’t get.

It’s understandable DeChambeau was upset when he finished the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic at 1-under-par 143 and assured himself of missing the cut.

And yes, I’m sure he didn’t want to face questions about his poor play as well as questions about his caddie quitting suddenly before the tournament.

ROCKET MORTGAGE: Sunday tee times, TV info | Leaderboard | Photos

DeChambeau finished the first round so late Thursday night that there were few reporters left to speak with him and he didn’t do any interviews afterward. On Friday, he refused requests for an interview. That means DeChambeau said absolutely nothing about the tournament during its first two rounds.

Nothing about the fans or Detroit or how the tournament dealt with the double difficulty of pivoting to welcoming fans back while dealing with horrible weather all week.

Nothing.

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That’s just unacceptable. And that’s coming from a sportswriter and a golf fan who likes DeChambeau. He’s an acquired taste and not for everyone — probably something like a cross between escargot and caviar. The intricacies of fine dining to some; gross slimy stuff to others.

When DeChambeau arrives at the British Open in two weeks, he likely will be asked about the sudden caddie breakup. But it’s a good bet no one at Royal St. George’s Golf Club will ask for his thoughts about Detroit Golf Club and the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

Simply put, DeChambeau owes the tournament and its fans more than this — a lot more — as the defending champ and a sponsor spokesman.

Even Phil Mickelson, who knew he was going to hear some uncomfortable questions about a gambling story, faced the music and did an interview after the first round. Willie Mack III, a local favorite from Flint operating on three hours’ sleep and flirting with missing the cut, answered questions with a smile.

I don’t expect athletes to be happy about interviews and questions. But they have to understand reporters are the conduit that connects them to their fans.

Maybe DeChambeau has a reasonable explanation for why he refused to speak Friday. If he doesn’t, he has a year to think of one.

Contact Carlos Monarrez at cmonarrez@freepress.com and follow him on Twitter @cmonarrez.

Lynch: Missteps by Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau expose an attitude that the media exists only to flatter

Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau are usually better in their approach to media than they showed this week.

The relationship between professional athletes and the press is fraught by its very nature, moreso in the wake of Naomi Osaka suggesting that media questioning is injurious to her mental health. However, at this week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic, two of golf’s biggest stars seemed more concerned about damage to their pride and ego.

Start with Phil Mickelson. He took exception to a Detroit News article detailing how he had been cheated out of a gambling win more than 20 years ago by a local bookie with ties to organized crime. Mickelson’s attorney acknowledged the accuracy of the report, but the six-time major winner fixated on the timing of it, suggesting it was an effort to embarrass him and the tournament. He repeatedly slammed the author of the story as “opportunistic,” “selfish” and “divisive,” then declared he wouldn’t return to the event.

“The lack of appreciation—I don’t see me coming back,” he fumed. “It’s hard for me or somebody to come in and bring other people and bring other entities involved to help out because you’re constantly being torn down, as opposed to brought together and built up.”

Mickelson has a point: If any other PGA Tour player fears it being revealed that he was soaked for $500,000 by a mobbed-up Michigan bookie then he might indeed have second thoughts about playing in Detroit, but Phil seems to have cornered the market on that status for now. The only person threatening adverse consequences for the Rocket Mortgage Classic and its charitable causes as a direct result of this story was Mickelson himself.

Phil Mickelson, Rocket Mortgage Classic
From left, Nolan Kern, Logan Beyer and Connor VanSumeren, all of Bay City, wearing Phil is God t-shirts cheer for Phil Mickelson as he walks by them on the second fairway during the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic. (Photo by Detroit Free Press)

The events revealed by the Detroit News are old, but that doesn’t make it old news. The details had not previously been reported, and it’s indisputably news when a famous athlete is taken for a half-million by a shady gambler. Nevertheless, Mickelson’s outrage found predictable support among those social media lickspittles who are always eager to be seen by celebrities as loyal supplicants, pitiably slobbering for a like, retweet or (praise be!) a reply.

Mickelson has every right to object to coverage he considers unfair, but underlying his response is a troubling expectation that media must function as cheerleaders when the Tour comes to town, and that failure to do so—by writing unflattering stories about him, for example—hurts the event and its charitable beneficiaries. Conflating his embarrassment with damage to the Rocket Mortgage Classic is preposterous, and accusing a reporter of deliberately hurting citizens in a deprived city by denying them the pleasure of his presence is bush league nonsense.

By Friday, Mickelson was gently backpedaling on his threatened boycott, pointing to a fan’s online petition promising 50,000 signatories imploring him to change his mind. “The people here were so nice that I’ll make a deal with them,” he said. “If he gets 50,000 and all of those 50,000 agree to do one random act of kindness for another member of the community, I’m in.”

Thus can individual churlishness be rebranded as communal charity.

It all had a faint echo of George Costanza. “I think I could be a philanthropist,” George mused in a long-ago Seinfeld episode. “Then they would come to me and beg! And if I felt like it, I would help them out. And then they would owe me big time!”

Mickelson has a well-honed public persona that is engaging and funny. He’s been subject to many unflattering articles in a long career and typically handles it with aplomb. That he chose to wage this war—and in doing so amplify the story to a much wider audience than it might otherwise have reached—seems an uncharacteristic fumble.

Not so uncharacteristic was the misstep of Bryson DeChambeau, whose Wednesday press conference was notable for his insistence that a final-nine 44 when leading the U.S. Open two weeks ago was down to “luck.” He refused to speak with media after playing Thursday and Friday on his way to missing the cut. It happens that players sometimes blow off the press after a lousy day. It’s not a capital offense. But DeChambeau wasn’t ducking questions about poor play but rather inquiries about why his longtime, long-suffering caddie Tim Tucker quit between a Wednesday practice round and a Thursday tee time. Those questions can and will wait until next time.

More significantly, DeChambeau was the defending champion at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He is also personally sponsored by Rocket Mortgage. At least one of those attachments comes with obligations that a mature professional would honor. Ignoring both might reasonably have Rocket Mortgage wondering what exactly they are paying for.

Bryson DeChambeau discusses his next shot with new caddie Ben Schomin on the 9th tee box during the first round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic golf tournament. (Photo: Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports)

It was at this event in 2020 that DeChambeau was widely criticized for suggesting—after a terse exchange with a cameraman who filmed him reacting angrily to a bad shot—that golf media needed to protect his brand and not show players in a poor light. For all his positive attributes, DeChambeau struggles to handle the emotions that attend uncomfortable questioning by the press. That he seems no better equipped for it this year than he was last year reflects poorly on his willingness to learn, or on his team’s willingness to teach.

Mickelson and DeChambeau are usually better in their approach to media than they showed this week. On Tuesday, both will return to cheerful glad-handing when they participate in The Match on July 6 alongside Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers. It’s a hit and giggle of little consequence, but it will illustrate a prevailing attitude toward the press: media that applaud and help sling product are good, media that pose awkward questions are bad. It’s the same binary equation beloved by bullshitters the world over. Not just in golf. And not just in sport.

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Rocket Mortgage Classic: Troy Merritt comes up aces, shares 54-hole lead

The highlight of Troy Merritt’s Saturday at Detroit Golf Club? His hole-out at the par-3 11th.

DETROIT – The fireworks on 4th of July weekend began a day early for Troy Merritt.

The 35-year-old Boise State product picked a good time to make his first hole-in-one in 10 years on the PGA Tour. From 218 yards on the par-3, 11th hole at Detroit Golf Club, Merritt was stuck between a soft 4-iron and a hard 5-iron. He and his caddie, Wayne Birch, figured they had 210 yards to cover the front with the wind helping out of the right. So Merritt drew a 5-iron that hopped once and disappeared into the bottom of the cup.

“I was geeked,” said Birch, who answers to the nickname Wayne-o, Drain-o.

The ace propelled Merritt to a 5-under 67 and a share of the 54-hole lead at the Rocket Mortgage Classic with Chile’s Joaquin Niemann, who remains bogey-free for the tournament.

Rocket Mortgage Classic: Leaderboard Tee timesBlog

By the time Merritt made his ace, he already had made birdie on four of his first seven holes, including a near ace at the fifth hole to break from the pack. Early in the third round, there was a pile-up near the top of the leaderboard with an eight-way tie for first and a dozen more players within one stroke of the lead. Merritt’s ace temporarily vaulted him three strokes in front, but after hitting 22 straight fairways – he ranks tied for second in driving accuracy this week – he missed three in a row, including to the right rough at No. 12, which led to his only bogey of the day.

Merritt, who finished T-8 here last year, will be seeking his third PGA Tour title on Sunday and first since the Barbasol Championship in 2018.

“There’s going to be quite a few birdies tomorrow and we’ve got to make them to keep pace and hopefully slightly ahead of everybody. The mindset will be find that fairway first, give ourselves as many looks as we can and keep all the squares off the card,” said Merritt, who leads the field in Strokes Gained: Putting. “Make a few birdies but don’t give any away, make them work to come and get us and hopefully it’s good enough in the end.”

Merritt will be paired in the final group with Niemann, ranked No. 30 in the world and at 22 one of the bright stars on the Tour. Niemann, the winner of the 2019 A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier, shot 68 to improve to 14-under 202 and is attempting to be the first winner to play 72 holes bogey-free since J.T. Poston at the 2019 Wyndham Championship. Niemann, who ranks a pedestrian 88th in scrambling for the season, is a perfect 13-of-13 this week.

“I always try to not make bogeys, but this week it’s working,” Niemann said.

Twenty-four players will start the final round within five strokes of the lead. Hank Lebioda and Cam Davis – both seeking their maiden Tour victory – trail by one stroke and are the closest pursuers. Lebioda’s 6-under 66 tied for the low round of the day, but he said he leaned heavily on his short game and his best shot of the day led to a tap-in par.

“It was the flop shot over the bunkers going towards the water on 14,” said the 27-year-old southpaw, who has continued his hot play after finishing T-5 last week at the Travelers Championship. “I thought I was the older lefty, the one who’s won a few more times, when I hit that. Yeah, it was a great shot.”

Davis, 26, made three birdies in a four-hole span on the front nine to join the fray en route to shooting 5-under 67. The Australian finished T-3 at the American Express and January and has his eye on the top prize this week.

“It’s been what I’ve been working for my whole life, so it would be pretty special,” he said.

Jason Kokrak shot one of nine bogey-free rounds, a 5-under 67, to climb within three strokes of the lead as he seeks his third win of the season.

“I think it’s going to be a putting contest,” Kokrak said. “Troy’s a great putter and it’s going to take everything I’ve got in the bag to catch him tomorrow if he continues the pace he’s on.”

Expect fireworks.

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Rickie Fowler on the British Open: ‘We’re jumping through some hurdles and dodging bullets and they’re having 32,000 fans a day at the tournament’

Rickie Fowler is safely into this month’s British Open, but he has other concerns where COVID safety precautions are concerned.

DETROIT – After missing out on the U.S. Open last month and the Masters earlier this year, Rickie Fowler doesn’t have to worry about qualifying for the British Open field – he’s exempt thanks to his top-10 finish at the 148th Open at Royal Portrush in 2019.

But he’s got other concerns about the season’s final major, especially after playing the first round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic with Hideki Matsuyama, who withdrew on Friday after testing positive for COVID -19.

“I’m vaccinated or whatever you want to call the shots,” he said. “Unfortunately, I know going over there, it doesn’t matter if you’re vaccinated or not.”

The R&A informed players last week that the championship will “operate under strict government oversight from the U.K. government.”

The guidelines prohibit players from going to bars, restaurants, and grocery stores during tournament week, and they must stay at either approved hotels or private residences, which can be shared with up to four members of their team and not other players. 

“Yeah, there’s definitely some concerns,” Fowler said. “Guys have been talking to me or have been talking to other guys, been making calls or sending texts back and forth with some of the people with the Open just with any questions or concerns that we have because there’s multiple things that come up as far as if there happens to be a couple people on the plane that test positive when you get there, you know, what happens with that?

“Obviously we’re all going into our own small bubbles, can’t be around other players. It seems like us as players, we’re jumping through some hurdles and dodging bullets and they’re having 32,000 fans a day at the tournament, so I don’t know. I can’t really answer questions clearly with all that going on.”

Fowler, who shot 4-under 68 on Saturday and held a share of the lead in the third round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic for the blink of an eye, finished T-5 at the 2011 British Open the last time it was held at Royal St. George’s in England. He was in contention until he shot a final-round 72 as Darren Clarke claimed the Claret Jug.

“I remember it decently well,” he said. “I remember that was my second Open. I actually made it through St. Andrews (in 2010) and then the first round and a half without hitting in a bunker. I laid up in a bunker with a 6-iron at Royal St. George’s, that was the first bunker I was in in an Open Championship, so we’ll see if we can stay out of those. That’s a big thing in links golf, as you know.

“But I think a lot of the stuff that I was kind of focusing on this week with setup and making sure my grip’s in a good spot so I’m able to get through it and release properly, a lot of that will kind of be some preparation moving forward thinking of shots that I’ll be hitting at the Open as well.”

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It’s got to be the shoes: Bubba Watson shoots 67 at Rocket Mortgage Classic in Michael Jordan’s hand-me-downs

Imagine getting MJ’s hand-me-downs. Such is the life of Bubba Watson.

DETROIT – Bubba Watson rocked a pair of Air Jordan golf shoes that caught at least one writer’s eye, who didn’t recognize that model. Turns out they were a pair not yet for sale. As a matter of fact, they were a pair of Air Jordans that Watson had acquired directly from Jordan himself.

“I know MJ pretty well and we wear the same size so I get a lot of his old shoes,” Watson explained.

Those would be size 13, for the record. Imagine getting MJ’s hand-me-downs. Such is the life of Bubba Watson. A day earlier, he was grinding to make his first cut at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, overcoming a stretch of three bogeys in a row (Nos. 12-14) with birdies on two of his final four holes to make the cut on the number at 3-under 139.

“They kept cheering for me and pulling for me to make a birdie so I could make the cut,” Watson said of his enthusiastic gallery. “I’ve never made a cut here, so it was nice to make the cut.”

That earned Watson an early-morning tee time and he took advantage of benign conditions and soft greens to shoot a third-round 5-under 67. After battling an uncooperative putter for two days, he found his touch around the greens, making four birdies in a five-hole stretch beginning at No. 10.

“Today I made some putts, kept the round going,” said Watson, who used his putter 10 fewer times on Saturday than in his previous round.

Watson, 42, still is less than seven days removed from some serious scar tissue. He blew what would’ve been his 13th PGA Tour victory and fourth title at the Travelers Championship. Leading by one stroke through 13 holes, he played the final five holes in 6-over par and tumbled to T-19. Asked how long it took him to get over his Sunday collapse, he deadpanned, “What Sunday? Oh, I’m over it. I don’t know, when did I sign my scorecard? I was good.”

As only Watson can, he added: “I’ve screwed up there before and I’ll probably screw up there again. Yeah, I was over it quick.”

Watson ranks 13th on the all-time Tour money list with earnings of more than $47 million, so, he’s not hurting to pay his mortgage, but his back-nine blunder cost him more than $1 million, which even his accountant would agree isn’t a rounding error. Asked at what point in his career he stopped worrying about how much money he earned, he said, “I never worried about money when I was broke and I’m not worried about money now.”

Watson had a classic reaction in the aftermath of blowing the Travelers: “I’m glad that I was there, had the opportunity. You know, I would love to do it again next week, throw up on myself again,” he said last Sunday. “It would be great. I want to have the opportunity and the chance to win.”

At 8 under, Watson likely will have too much ground to make up on Sunday to be in the trophy hunt, but he’s feeling good about the state of his game and looking forward to the British Open in two weeks at Royal St. George’s, where he finished T-30 in 2011.

So, Bubba, what’s the scouting report on the course?

“I don’t remember anything. I tried to find photos of the golf course. Every time you see the photos on the internet, it’s always different than the tournament, right?” he said. “I think when I get there I’ll remember what happened and different things, but yeah, I finished 30th only because I Googled it to see what I finished.”

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Rocket Mortgage Classic: Tom Lewis and Joaquin Niemann are bogey-free and share 36-hole lead

No bogeys through 36 holes have Tom Lewis and Joaquin Niemann at the top of the leaderboard and feeling pretty good about it.

DETROIT – At a muddy, water-logged Detroit Golf Club, Joaquin Niemann and Tom Lewis have been Mr. Clean this week.

As in their cards, through two rounds of the Rocket Mortgage Classic, are spotless. No bogeys through 36 holes have the 22-year-old Chilean and the 30-year-old Englishman at the top of the leaderboard and feeling pretty good about it.

“Right now everything is pretty good,” Niemann said.

And why wouldn’t it be? Niemann, who fired a 65 on Thursday, was in one of the last groups to complete the first round before play was suspended due to darkness. He returned on Friday morning and kept away those pesky bogeys. He opened with seven pars before wedging inside 3 feet for his first birdie of the day at No. 8. He tacked on another at the par-5 14th, after hitting the green in 2 and two putting and took advantage of the par-5 17th for his final circle on the card.

Niemann’s second-round 3-under 69 boosted his 36-hole total to 10-under 134, same as Lewis, and one-stroke better than Troy Merritt, Max Homa and Chris Kirk at the midway point of the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

Niemann, who entered the week ranked No. 30 in the world, blamed a balky putter for his first missed cut of the season at the Memorial and for middling finishes at the U.S. Open and the Travelers Championship. But it’s come alive this week.

“I think that’s the best part of my game right now,” he said.

Indeed, it has. Niemann, who finished T-5 here in 2019, has gained more than five strokes on the green and he’s a perfect 9-for-9 in scrambling.

Lewis, 30, birdied two of his first four holes and canned a 9-foot par putt at the last hole to save par and keep the card spotless for the first 36 holes.

“I was saying to my caddie, John, it would be nice to go up and down and go bogey-free for two rounds. It’s always nice doing that,” Lewis said. “I’m just happy, even if I did miss that putt, to be in the position I am going into the weekend. I’m really pleased with the way I’ve been playing.”

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As he should given that he’s missed the cut in half of his 22 previous starts this season as well as four of his last six tournaments, and his only top-10 finish was at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a two-man team event. Lewis opened with a pair of 67s last week at the Travelers Championship to make the cut but stumbled to 74 on Saturday and tumbled to a T-47 finish.

“I think the toughest round for me is going to be tomorrow. If I can go out and shoot under par, whatever happens, I’ll be really happy with that,” he said.

Lewis and Niemann have plenty of company behind them. Merritt’s 4-under 68 was set up by hitting all 14 fairways on Friday.

“When it’s this soft out here, there’s pretty much one club you hit off of every tee box, don’t even have to think about it,” he said.

But the key has been the return of his putting form, he said.

“When it’s consistently the best part of your game and you struggle with it for more than half of the year, it makes it pretty tough,” Merritt said.

Max Homa can relate, although he only struggled to see putts fall for about 30 holes. But once he broke the seal with a 35-footer at the par-3 15th, he finished with a flurry of four birdies in a row to shoot 7-under 65.

“Joe said it best,” Homa said of caddie Joe Greiner. “When we made the putt on 16, he said, ‘It’s a messed up game we play because we’ve been feeling like the hole’s a thimble and you make one long one and it starts to feel like a bucket.’ ”

Homa’s round tied for the low round of the day with Russell Knox, who hit all 18 greens in regulation and didn’t mind the gusty conditions. Neither did Chris Kirk, who shot 68 and is chasing his first PGA Tour victory since 2015 at a tree-lined course that fits his eye.

“Yeah, it certainly favors the guys that are hitting it out of the middle of the face, that’s for sure,” he said.

Does he count himself among them?

“So far, so far, yeah. It’s been all right,” he said.

Among those who weren’t dialed in this week are Bryson DeChambeau, Gary Woodland and Webb Simpson, who missed the cut. Hideki Matsuyama is another big name who checked out early after testing positive for COVID-19.

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Rocket Mortgage Classic: Russell Knox rides the wind to a PGA Tour rarity

Russell Knox hit a perfect 18 of 18 greens in regulation in the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic, which is more rare than you might think.

DETROIT – Russell Knox scrolled through social media last night and stopped to read a post from Lou Stagner, who goes by the nickname Golf Stat Pro, claiming that a PGA Tour pro is more likely to make an ace than hit all 18 greens.

According to his data, the chance a player hits all 18 greens happens once every 582 rounds while the chances of a hole-in-one is once every 563 rounds. On Friday, Knox mentioned this to his fellow playing competitors Joaquin Niemann and Garrick Higgo on the 15th hole and that’s when it hit him.

“I had no idea that I had hit every green. I started doing the math and I was a little nervous over my second shot at 18 because I knew I hadn’t chipped all day,” Knox said.

Knox knocked that approach on the green to complete a perfect 18 of 18 greens in regulation. He recalled he once hit every fairway and green in a round at a Korn Ferry Tour event in Omaha, Nebraska. But the last time he hit every green in regulation? Glad you asked: It was the third round of the 2016 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

“I play terribly in Maui,” Knox said.

He’s dialed in so far in Detroit, shooting a second-round 7-under 65 at Detroit Golf Club to climb into contention at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. Knox made eight birdies and one bogey, including six birdies in a seven-hole stretch beginning at No. 8. The 36-year-old native Scotsman missed the cut last week at the Travelers Championship but had already forgotten about his subpar performance.

“I needed a round like today, just to be like, OK, things are good, I know I’m swinging good, nice kind of pat on the back, let’s hammer down. My game has been there for months. I just haven’t done it yet. But today was a nice day where it was there,” he said.

Knox leads the field this week in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green and proximity to the hole. He averaged 14 feet, 7 inches in the second round on a day when gusting winds made judging club selection challenging. But the wind is Knox’s friend.

“I need the wind, I think, to bring out the creativity in my game,” he said. “I know my caddie (Bradley Whittle) prays for wind every day.”

The wind treated Knox well on Friday, all the way to a rare achievement. Although for the record, Scott Brown made an ace on the 15th tee, proving that the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic was the rare chance to see both a hole-in-one and 18 of 18 greens in regulation. Hey, Lou, what are the odds of seeing both in one round?

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