TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) – Brett Quigley shot a 5-under 68 on Saturday in the Cologuard Classic to open a three-stroke lead in his bid to win for the second time in his first four PGA Tour Champions starts. “You just don’t know in golf,” Quigley said. “You just don’t know what you have day to day, week to week. I had been playing some really nice golf the last couple three months and didn’t know it would come this quickly.” Fred Couples was second after a 66. The 60-year-old Hall of Famer won the last of his 13 senior titles in 2017.
“I enjoy playing,” Couples said. “If I can drive it like that, then an age is really irrelevant. It will become a struggle when I’m hitting it for some reason 30 yards shorter and all these holes I hit a driver and a 9-iron are now a driver and a 7-iron, I will not nearly be the player that I want to be, so I will be bye, bye.” The 50-year-old Quigley won a month ago in Morocco in his second Champions start and tied for ninth two weeks ago in Florida in the Chubb Classic.
He made his senior debut in September in Calgary, Alberta, tying for 64th in the Shaw Charity Classic. Couples referred to Quigley as “the kid.” “That’s nice. Certainly I feel like a newbie again, definitely a neophyte out here,” Quigley said. “It’s against all the guys I grew up playing with and a lot of guys I grew up watching, so it’s fun.” A stroke ahead entering the day after an opening 64, Quigley birdied three of the first five holes in the second round on Tucson National’s Catalina Course.
He finished with six birdies and a bogey to reach 14-under 132. “To back up yesterday’s round with a pretty good round today, 5 under,” Quigley said. “A little off the back nine, but managed to shoot under par, so certainly happy overall.” The nephew of 11-time PGA Tour Champions winner Dana Quigley, he had five runner-up finishes in 408 starts on the PGA Tour, earning more than $11 million. “I’ve got to keep trying HOW TO COOK RICE make birdies, that’s the bottom line,” Quigley said. Couples birdied five of the first six holes.
He played the back nine in 2 under with four birdies and two bogeys. Miguel Angel Jimenez (66) and Rod Pampling (68) were 11 under. Bernhard Langer (68) and Robert Karlsson (71) followed at 10 under. “My game is in good shape,” Jimenez said. “The ball wants to go in.” Pampling is making his fifth senior start. The Australian eagled the par-5 12th. “It’s nice to be in the mix,” Pampling said. “Someone’s going to win tomorrow, so just got to go low, get it going low tomorrow and hopefully it will be me.