
Scheffler shares US PGA lead as Aronimink bites back
Scheffler shares US PGA lead as Aronimink bites back Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, World number one Scottie Scheffler is looking to defend the US PGA Championship after winning at Quail Hollow last...
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Breaking news from the world of sport: Scheffler shares US PGA lead as Aronimink bites back Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, World number one Scottie Scheffler is looking to defend the US PGA Championship after winning at Quail Hollow last yearByJonathan Jurejko Sport golf reporterPublished15 minutes agoGoing into this week's US PGA Championship, there was a fascination with how Aronimink would play and what challenge it would present. There was a strong feeling the Pennsylvania course might be ripe for being tamed. Instead of having its belly tickled and rolling over, Aronimink bit back on day one of the season's second major.
At the completion of Thursday's first round, only 32 players - barely a fifth of the 156-man field - had finished under par. The world's best struggled to get to grips with the task presented by an undulating course with thick rough and sloping greens. Fittingly, it was the world's very best - Scottie Scheffler - who coped as well as anyone.
Match Details
The defending champion is part of a seven-way tie for the first-round lead after plotting a three-under round of 67 which encapsulated his ability to play with relentless diligence and barely a flicker of fluster. The world number one has often struggled to make fast starts - a trait which has proved particularly costly this season - but is now leading a major after 18 holes for the first time in his career. But the 29-year-old American is not surrounded by the usual suspects.
Scheffler finds himself alongside German pair Martin Kaymer and Stephan Jaeger, South Africa's Aldrich Potgieter, Australia's Min-Woo Lee, Japan's Ryo Hisatsune and Alex Smalley of the United States - none of whom many would have expected to see at the top of the leaderboard. "Earlier in the week there was some chatter where people thought 15 to 20 under par was going to win. And I think that got to somebody in the PGA , and they did something about it," said Spain's Jon Rahm, who finished one under par.
'My caddie was yelling at me' - late Higgo denied US PGA lead Published6 hours agoMcIlroy and Rahm grouped together - US PGA tee-times Published30 minutes agoMasters champion Rory McIlroy's gameplan of bashing the driver as far as possible came unstuck late on in his round after more erratic tee-shots. The 37-year-old from Northern Ireland, who had no issues with the troublesome toe which affected his preparations, ended seven shots behind the leaders after finishing with four successive bogeys to post a four-over 74. "There certainly is a penalty for missing the fairway.
Reactions and Expectations
Probably more than what I anticipated," said McIlroy. Bryson DeChambeau, another big bomber, shot a six-over 76 as power was trumped by precision. The unorthodox American's short game badly let him down.
Getting to grips with the geometry of the greens was always likely to prove a key battleground and, after some overnight rain softened up the putting surfaces for the early starters, the devilish pin positions invited trouble.
The story has climbed to the top of the sports agenda, with fans and analysts following closely.





