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Branden Grace shoots 62 at British Open to set majors record

Branden Grace of South Africa reacts after holing out on the 18th green to give him a third-round score of 62, a major record, at Royal Birkdale golf course.
(Ben Stansall / Getty Images)
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Branden Grace was playing in the daylight — good weather, at last — and the dark.

The South African had no idea that he was headed for history Saturday, that his eight-birdie round of 62 in the British Open was the lowest ever in a major championship.

As a result, Grace went from ho-hum to history. He had narrowly made the plus-5 cut, finishing the first two days at Royal Birkdale at 4 over par. He said that on No. 18, he had no idea he was doing something no one else had ever done.

“I honestly didn’t,” he said. “You know, I was just so in the zone of playing, hole after hole. I knew I was obviously playing really well, and making the turn at 5-under was pretty special. And I thought if I could make a couple more on the back nine, then it’s going to be a great score. I had no idea that 62 was obviously the lowest ever.”

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There have been 31 golfers who have shot a 63 in majors, including Phil Mickelson in the opening round at Royal Troon last year — his final putt for 62 rimmed out — and current defending British Open champion Henrik Stenson, who shot 63 on Sunday of last year’s tournament.

Grace had 10 pars and birdied Nos. 1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 14, 16 and 17. According to statistics provided by Grace, he made putts of 16, 35, 25, 12, 34, and 28 feet — staggering.

“My main thing was just trying not to bogey 18,” he said. “I wanted to finish strong. It’s always so bad, you feel so bad making bogey on the last hole, especially after a good day like that.”

The golfers had the benefit of good weather and a course that had been softened by heavy rains the day before, allowing golfers to better hold the greens with their approach shots.

Grace said Birkdale is “in immaculate condition” and “the best that I’ve seen any golf links in.”

“The greens are softer, still gettable,” he said. “They’ve done a couple things today that I’ve actually not seen at the Opens. Moving the tee up, I think, 30 yards on the 5th. Trying to give the guys a chance to go for it. Things on the 7th, they’ve moved the tee up 30 yards. So it’s giving some guys the opportunity to be aggressive. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. But I think that’s why there are low scores out there today.”

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This is the seventh British Open for Grace, whose best finish was a tie for 20th in 2015.

There will surely be unresolved debate about what’s better, a 62 on a par-70 course or a 63 on a par-72. The bottom line is, Grace made history in the pressurized crucible in a major.

“Talking about this can go on forever,” Grace said. “It’s like when somebody plays a 70 and you shoot a 59. I’ve shot a 12-under on a links course and I’ve shot 60.

“I’m just happy with shooting a good round at a special tournament.”

sam.farmer@latimes.com

Follow Sam Farmer on Twitter @LATimesfarmer

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