KAPALUA, Hawaii — Collin Morikawa had to judge how his ball would come out of the first cut of rough on the 16th hole at Kapalua, and it was close to perfect, settling 20 inches away for a sure birdie in his terrific duel with Hideki Matsuyama.
Matsuyama was some 20 yards closer. He sent his lob wedge over the pin and used a combination of spin and slope for the shot to roll past Morikawa's ball and stop 8 inches away.
It was like that all day Saturday at The Sentry.
Matsuyama had a personal best with 11 birdies in his bogey-free round of 62, setting the Plantation course record for 54 holes at 27-under 192.
All that got him was a one-shot lead over Morikawa, who matched his 62 and just about everything else Matsuyama did on another day of virtually no wind and ridiculously low scoring in the PGA Tour opener.
''Collin played well and I just kind of followed him, so good day,'' said Matsuyama, a Japanese star of few words and plenty of birdies.
Morikawa played so well at the start that it wasn't until the sixth hole when he hit a shot he didn't like, a wedge to 25 feet and a birdie chance that rimmed around the cup. In 54 holes, he has only missed two greens.
''Today was really, really good. Couple shots out there a little squirrely, but for the most part the irons were center face, knew where they were going,'' Morikawa said.