Day two behind early leaders at weather-hit Pebble Beach`

Published 09/02/2017 in Sports

Day two behind early leaders at weather-hit Pebble Beach`
Feb 9, 2017- Pebble Beach, CA, USA- Jason Day watches his shot on the 17th fairway during the first round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am golf tournament at Monterey Peninsula Country Club. Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

Jason Day ground out a two-under-par 69 to sit two strokes off the lead on Thursday when the opening round of the weather-hit Pebble Beach National Pro-Am was suspended for the day with only half the field back in the clubhouse.

Australian Day had to contend with driving wind and rain over his last four holes before organizers halted play at 1:34 p.m. PST (2134 GMT) due to unplayable conditions on the Monterey Peninsula in California.

One hour later, play was abandoned for the day with unheralded Americans Rick Lamb and Joel Dahmen, and South Korean Noh Seung-yul, sharing top spot on the leaderboard after opening with four-under 68s.

All three had started out on the Spyglass Hill layout, one of three venues being used for this week’s PGA Tour event.

Seventy-four players in a field of 156 had completed their rounds and organizers hope to get the tournament back on track on Friday, though weather forecasts predict a 50 percent of rain at Pebble Beach on Friday morning.

“We only played four holes in the rain,” Day told Golf Channel after mixing four birdies with two bogeys at Monterey Peninsula Country Club. “It’s hit and miss … sometimes you can get lucky with the draw, especially where you are playing.

“If you were playing at Spy today, it definitely helped a little bit, especially with some of the cover in the trees, but you’ve just got to take what you can get and try and win the tournament at the end of the week.”

Given the weather conditions, Day was thrilled with his opening round.

“I feel pretty good with how things are going, coming out today and shooting a couple under par,” said the 29-year-old, a 10-times winner on the PGA Tour.

“The hardest part about today was actually committing to the shot more so than anything because you had a lot of side winds. I’m looking forward to Spyglass tomorrow.”

Among the other high-profile names competing this week, world number six Jordan Spieth was three under after 16 holes at Monterey Peninsula while four-times champion Phil Mickelson was one under after 17 on the same layout.

(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in St. Augustine, Florida- Editing by Frank Pingue)

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