Anirban Lahiri produced a brilliant finish to his second round with a hat-trick of birdies and two steady pars for a round of five-under 67 that catapulted him to seven-under and tied fourth place at the halfway stage of the PGA Championships here today.
Beginning the traditional 'Moving day', the third day of a event, Lahiri came back to finish his remaining five holes of the second round and immediately rolled in three successive birdie to go with the three he had in the first 13 last evening here at the Whistling Straits.
With six birdies against one bogey, his 67 also meant the best-ever round by an Indian at any Major. He bettered the score of 68, once each by Jeev Milkha Singh (2008 PGA), Lahiri himself (2012 British Open) and Shiv Kapur (2013 British Open).
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Lahiri's tied fourth place is the best an Indian has been placed at the halfway stage of any Major.
It also put Lahiri in line to go better than Jeev's best finish by an Indian at any Major, which is tied-ninth at the 2008 PGA Championships at Oakland Hills.
On the Indian Independence Day, Lahiri rolled in birdies on fifth, sixth and seventh, before closing with steady pars on eighth and ninth holes for a round of 67.
Speaking of his three birdies, Lahiri, winner of Malaysian Open and Hero Indian Open this year, said, "(On) the fifth hole, I found the fairway and I hit my 3-wood just over the green, a couple yards over the back and 2-putted from there. Then on sixth, where they had the tees up, so I hit my driver, but was 10 or 15 yards was short of the green. Chipped it to about four or five feet and I holed it.
"And on 7 (par-3), I hit a great shot. I think that's probably the best shot I've hit all of my second round, not just today. It was playing about 224 yards or so. I hit my 4-iron to about five feet. And I tapped that in. So that was a good stretch there. I think the course is playing really well.
"There hasn't been a massive difference in how the course has played. Obviously, wind's a factor that can come and go but in terms of how the greens or the fairways have rolled out or the roughs have held up, the bunkers, they have all been very, very consistent. So there's not that much that's going to change," he said.