Corey Conners defied the hammering winds of Kiawah Island to fire a five-under par 67 and seize a two-stroke lead after Thursday’s first round of the PGA Championship.
The 29-year-old Canadian overcame gusting breezes and sandy waste areas that played havoc with many of the world’s top golfers as second-ranked Justin Thomas and seventh-ranked Rory McIlroy struggled to 75s on the formidable Ocean Course.
“It was fairly stress-free,” Conners said of his round. “I got a lot of putts to go in. Kept the ball in the fairway for the most part.”
Four-time major winner Brooks Koepka, 2011 PGA winner Keegan Bradley, fellow American Aaron Wise, Norway’s Viktor Hovland, Australia’s Cam Davis and England’s Sam Horsfield were in a second-place pack on 69.
South Africa’s Branden Grace, defending champion Collin Morikawa and five-time major winner Phil Mickelson were in an eighth-place group on 70, three shots adrift.
Mickelson, the 50-year-old US left-hander, turned back the clock after four bogeys in the first six holes with four of his six birdies on the back nine to share seventh.
“I was able to right the ship,” he said. “I putted really well.”
Three-time major winner Jordan Spieth, who can complete a career Grand Slam with a victory, opened on 73 while top-ranked Dustin Johnson opened on 76.
Four-time major champion McIlroy, the 2012 PGA winner at Kiawah, made six bogeys while Thomas had three bogeys and a double bogey, all involving the sandy waste areas that penalized off-target shots.
A group featuring three reigning major champions produced mixed results with Morikawa on 70, US Open winner Bryson DeChambeau on 72 despite four bogeys in a row and Masters winner Hideki Matsuyama of Japan on 73.
“It’s diabolical,” DeChambeau said of the course. “You’ve got to be consistent and persistent and stay patient.”
World number 39 Conners, coming off two top-10 finishes at the Masters in the past six months, won his only US PGA title at the 2019 Texas Open.
Conners was third at Bay Hill in March and fourth last month at the nearby Heritage tournament in his best finishes so far this year.
Conners rolled in a 32-foot birdie putt at the par-5 second, holed another from 33 feet at the par-3 fifth and dropped his approach at the par-5 seventh within three feet of the cup to set up another birdie.
After a bogey at the ninth, when he found dirt on his approach, Conners answered with a 10-foot birdie putt at the par-5 11th, then seized the lead with birdies from 56 feet after laying up at the par-4 15th and four feet at the par-5 16th.
“There’s nothing I want to do differently,” Conners said. “I didn’t really make any mistakes out there. I played solid all through the bag.”
Koepka, seeking his third PGA title in four years, rallied after opening with a double bogey at the 10th hole.
“Got off to a bad start,” Koepka said. “It helped get the round going, got me focused, got me into a rhythm.”
Koepka dropped his approach inside three feet and birdied the par-5 11th, sank a nine-footer for birdie at 13, answered a bogey at 15 with a tap-in birdie at the par-5 16th.
The world number 12 sank birdie putts of 24 feet at the fourth and 16 feet at the par-3 third and landed his approach inches from the cup to birdie the par-5 seventh.
“Six birdies in any round is pretty good,” Koepka said.
Koepka, a 31-year-old American who won the 2017 and 2018 US Open and 2018 and 2019 PGAs, is still fighting pain from right knee surgery in March.
“I don’t need to be 100% to play good,” Koepka said. “I’m ready to play.”
Hovland comfortable
Back-nine starters like Koepka, Wise and Hovland played nine consecutive holes into the wind.
“You’re just trying to hang on for dear life those nine holes,” Koepka said.
Bradley, who hasn’t won in almost three years, had tap-in birdies on three par-5s and rolled in a 35-footer to birdie the ninth.
“When you go out there and perform, it feels good, especially on a course like this,” Bradley said. “It’s a little more pressure. The atmosphere is different.”
Hovland, a 23-year-old seeking his first major triumph, won his first two PGA Tour titles last year at the Puerto Rico Open and Mayakoba Classic in Mexico.
“I can’t remember the last time I felt as good as I did today on the golf course,” Hovland said. “I really felt comfortable off the tee. I hit a bunch of fairways and I was able to hit a bunch of greens as well.”
First-round scores on Thursday in the 2021 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, South Carolina (USA unless noted, par-72):
67 – Corey Conners (CAN)
69 – Keegan Bradley, Viktor Hovland (NOR), Brooks Koepka, Aaron Wise, Sam Horsfield (ENG), Cam Davis (AUS)
70 – Cameron Tringale, Martin Laird (SCO), Collin Morikawa, Phil Mickelson, Branden Grace (RSA), Gary Woodland, Kevin Streelman, Im Sung-jae (KOR)
71 – Talor Gooch, Paul Casey (ENG), Rickie Fowler, Tyrrell Hatton (ENG), Jason Dufner, Louis Oosthuizen (RSA), Stewart Cink, Tom Lewis (ENG), Jason Kokrak, Richy Werenski, Joaquin Niemann (CHI), Padraig Harrington (IRL), Rasmus Hojgaard (DEN), Christiaan Bezuidenhout (RSA), Will Zalatoris
72 – Adam Long, Harry Higgs, Scottie Scheffler, Bubba Watson, Bryson DeChambeau, Erik van Rooyen (RSA), Jon Rahm (ESP), Justin Rose (ENG), Cameron Smith (AUS), Ben Cook
73 – Dylan Frittelli (RSA), Matt Jones (AUS), Harold Varner, An Byeong-hun (KOR), Garrick Higgo (RSA), Jimmy Walker, Henrik Stenson (SWE), Lee Westwood (ENG), Xander Schauffele, Hideki Matsuyama (JPN), Jason Scrivener (AUS), Charley Hoffman, Matt Wallace (ENG), Brad Marek, Denny McCarthy, Matt Fitzpatrick (ENG), Carlos Ortiz (MEX), Andy Sullivan (ENG), Jordan Spieth, Shane Lowry (IRL), Patrick Cantlay
74 – Marc Leishman (AUS), Tom Hoge, Joel Dahmen, Zach Johnson, Ryan Palmer, Lanto Griffin, Kalle Samooja (FIN), Abraham Ancer (MEX), Rich Beem, Tony Finau, Jason Day (AUS), Patrick Reed, Ian Poulter (ENG), Brendon Todd, Dean Burmester (RSA)
75 – Brendan Steele, George Coetzee (RSA), Robert MacIntyre (SCO), John Catlin, Martin Kaymer (GER), Harris English, Rory McIlroy (NIR), Justin Thomas, Chan Kim, Mark Geddes (ENG), Kim Si-woo (KOR), Alex Beach, Daniel van Tonder (RSA), Wyndham Clark, Yang Yong-eun (KOR), J.T. Poston, Brian Harman, Webb Simpson, Mackenzie Hughes (CAN), Takumi Kanaya (JPN)
76 – Patrick Rada, Ben Polland, Rob Labritz, Thomas Detry (BEL), Charl Schwartzel (RSA), Rikuya Hoshino (JPN), Tommy Fleetwood (ENG), Steve Stricker, Dustin Johnson, Thomas Pieters (BEL), Lucas Herbert, Chris Kirk, Greg Koch
77 – Kevin Kisner, Hudson Swafford, Brandon Hagy, Danny Willett (ENG), Alex Noren (SWE), Emiliano Grillo (ARG), Brett Walker, Brian Gay, Robert Streb, Kurt Kitayama, Sebastian Munoz (COL), Adam Hadwin (CAN), Jazz Janewattananond (THA), Billy Horschel, Chez Reavie, Sergio Garcia (ESP), Matt Kuchar
78 – Bernd Wiesberger (AUT), Adam Scott (AUS), Peter Malnati, Jim Herman, Sami Valimaki (FIN), Max Homa, Russell Henley, Brandon Stone (RSA), Lee Kyoung-hoon (KOR), Victor Perez (FRA), Maverick McNealy
79 – Derek Holmes, Kevin Na, Danny Balin, Tim Pearce, Daniel Berger, Antoine Rozner (FRA)
80 – Larkin Gross, Pete Ballo
81 – Joe Summerhays, Shaun Micheel, Aaron Rai (ENG)
82 – Cameron Champ, Stuart Smith, Omar Uresti
85 – John Daly, Sonny Skinner
86 – Frank Bensel
88 – Tyler Collet
Sam Burns W/D