American Sahith Theegala: Even as many big names suffered a lot at the tough Pinehurst No. 2, Akshay Bhatia, playing only his second US Open, held his nerve to overcome two early bogeys to card 1-over 71. He is Tied-ninth at the halfway stage of the 124th US Open.
A two-time PGA Tour winner, the Indian-American Bhatia’s parents are Indian, but he was born and brought up in the US. He is 1-under for 36 holes with 68-71.
The other similar Indian-American Sahith Theegala improved on his first round of 77 by eight shots for a 68 and squeezed inside the cutline alongside Major winners like world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (71-74) and Brooks Koepka (70-75). They were all Tied-57th as the cut fell at 5-over.
Leading the field is the Swedish sensation Ludvig Aberg, who shot a 69 to hold a one-stroke lead on 5-under 135 from Bryson DeChambeau (67-69), Thomas Detry (69-67) and Patrick Cantlay (65-71), who are all at 4-under 136.
Rory McIlroy, seeking a fifth career major and first in 10 years, is amongst those on 137 following a 72. He is Tied-fifth.
Meanwhile, the legendary Tiger Woods missed the cut with rounds of 74-73.
Aberg is a first-time at the US Open after having made his debuts at the Masters with a runner-up finish and missing the cut at the PGA Championship earlier this year. This is only his third Major start.
Aberg has positioned himself potentially to be the first player to win the U.S. Open on debut since Francis Ouimet in 1913.
Asian stars Hideki Matsuyama of Japan and Korea’s Tom Kim fought their way into title contention after cards of 4-under 66 and 2-under 68 propelled them into solo eighth and tied ninth respectively in the second round.
Matsuyama, the 2021 Masters Tournament champion, fired the day’s low round featuring four birdies without a bogey to sit on 2-under 138 at Pinehurst No. 2.
Kim, a three-time PGA Tour winner, racked up five birdies against three bogeys for a 139 total as he looks to improve on last year’s eighth place finish in the year’s third major. Compatriots S.H. Kim and Si Woo Kim posted matching 72s for tied 21st and equal 37th respectively.
No Asian player has won the U.S. Open since its inception in 1895. Matsuyama, a nine-time Tour winner, and Kim will carry the challenge over the weekend. The 32-year-old Matsuyama, who was a joint runner-up at Erin Hills in 2017 for his best U.S. Open finish, credited his short game for his rise up the leaderboard in one of the toughest tests of the year.
The 21-year-old Kim, who is competing in his seventh straight week, intends to keep his foot on the pedal in his chase for major glory. The 21-year-old enjoyed a season’s first top-10 at the RBC Canadian Open a few weeks ago, and intends to improve on his 23rd place finish in his U.S. Open debut in 2022 and tied for eighth last season. He feels up to the severe test at Pinehurst. Kim’s best major finish was tied second at last year’s The Open Championship.