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Jordan Spieth takes another step with a 67 to lead at Pebble Beach

Jordan Spieth follows his drive on the 10th tee at Spyglass Hill on Feb. 12, 2021.
Jordan Spieth follows his drive on the 10th tee at Spyglass Hill. He shot a five-under 67 in the second round of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am and leads by one stroke.
(Eric Risberg / Associated Press)
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Jordan Spieth took on a bold tee shot and pulled it off perfectly to set up birdie. He hit a poor three-wood that went off a tree and back into the fairway that led to another.

Whether it’s good golf or good breaks, it’s making him feel a lot better about his game at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. He shot a five-under-par 67 at Spyglass Hill on Friday for a one-stroke lead over Daniel Berger going into the weekend.

“I like where things are at,” Spieth said, referring to more than his name atop the leaderboard on the weekend for the second straight week.

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Winless since his British Open title in 2017 at Royal Birkdale, Spieth wasn’t sure whether he was taking baby steps or a giant leap. But one week after relying so much on his wizardry with the wedge and putter, this was a steady diet of keeping the ball inside the tree-lined fairways of Spyglass, reducing stress and making a few putts.

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Feb. 12, 2021

There was a 45-foot birdie putt he holed on the tough par-three fifth hole. He also missed a few inside 10 feet, and his lone bogey was a three-putt from seven feet on the par-five first hole after he made the turn.

“A little bit improved off last week, which was the goal this week, to just try and feel like I’m getting better each day,” said Spieth, whose tie for fourth in Phoenix was his best result since May 2019. “I haven’t made a ton of longer putts, which is probably a really good sign that I’m keeping the ball in front of me and striking it really nicely.”

Spieth was at 12-under 132, his first 36-hole lead since Birkdale.

Berger shot a 66 at Pebble Beach by going 2-3-2 along the ocean on a day filled will sunshine and a Pacific breeze. He holed 15-foot birdie putts on the par-three fifth and par-three seventh holes and in between chipped in for eagle from about 20 feet on the par-five sixth.

“I didn’t make a bunch of birdies in the middle of the round and then hung in there and toward the end rattled off a couple and got myself in a good position going into Saturday,” Berger said.

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Henrik Norlander had a 70 at Spyglass and was at 10 under, while the group at nine-under 135 included Patrick Cantlay, a former UCLA standout whose record-tying 62 at Pebble Beach on Thursday was quickly forgotten. His opening tee shot at No. 10 on Spyglass hit a tree and was never found, sending him back to the tee. He opened with a double-bogey and eventually got those two shots back until a three-putt bogey on the par-three third and pars the rest of the way in.

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Spieth showed his level of trust on the 17th hole, 325 yards with a sharp turn to the left. Instead of laying back with a fairway metal as he often does, he took driver to the front of the green, leaving him a flop shot to five feet for birdie. Cantlay in the group behind was too far right, into a bunker about 40 yards short, and he made bogey.

Spieth surged into the lead with a gap wedge that got the ridge perfectly on the skinny green at No. 4, and followed that with a five-iron to 45 feet, a birdie putt helped by Rickie Fowler going first from the same line.

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Feb. 12, 2021

Spieth reached the front of the green on the par-five seventh with a hybrid for a two-putt birdie, then figured his one miss off the tee would cost him on No. 8.

“I hit the tree off the tee,” he said with a smile. “I toed a three-wood and it came out in the fairway, and I hit a seven-iron that happened to go right of the right pin, below the hole. That was a steal there, for sure.”

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Good breaks have been hard to find for Spieth over the last two years. He has seen his share of shots that hit the tree and carom out-of-bounds, or tee shots that bury in the rough instead of sitting up.

“I’ll tell you what, it’s crazy. You go on runs of cards out here,” he said. “You get good ones, and then you go on a bad run of cards. I’m now hitting it and kind of thinking it’s going to be a good break again, which is really nice.

“But you don’t rely on that,” he added. “It’s just when it happens, it’s obviously really nice.”

The cut was at one-under 143 after 36 holes on Pebble Beach and Spyglass. Only two courses are being used this year because the tournament has no amateurs, or spectators, due to COVID-19 restrictions.

Fowler, who played alongside Spieth and defending champion Nick Taylor (at four-under 140), shot a 75 and missed the cut for the second straight week. Fowler has gone just over a year since his last finish in the top 10.

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