NORTH BERWICK, Scotland — Justin Thomas dressed in tartan-patterned trousers and played the part Thursday in the Scottish Open with an 8-under 62, his lowest opening round on the PGA Tour since his 59 in the Sony Open seven years ago.
Rory McIlroy was three shots behind with a 65 that he hopes will be a big step toward moving on from his U.S. Open collapse last month.
Thomas, who had a one-shot lead over Sungjae Im, was playing so well in the more benign afternoon conditions that he even thought about joining Jim Furyk with another sub-60 round. That was his mistake.
''I thought the par was 71, and then I looked up and saw even-par 70 and was like, ‘Oh, I just need a couple of more (birdies) and I can shoot 59.' And then shockingly, I made five pars in a row,'' the American said.
Thomas ran off four straight birdies on the front nine of The Renaissance Club — three of them from 6 feet or closer — birdied the par-5 10th with a simple up-and-down and holed a 40-foot birdie putt on the 12th.
On the outward portion of the course along the Firth of Forth, he drilled his approach to 2 feet for birdie on the 13th to reach 8-under par. And then the putts stopped falling, including a chance from just inside 10 feet on the 15th. On the par-5 16th, he went into the rough off the tee, had a 3-wood squirt right into the really deep stuff and did well to make par.
Thomas is capable of this kind of golf — it was his 54th time he made at least eight birdies in a round — but they have been few and far between lately. He still is searching for his first win since the PGA Championship two years ago at Southern Hills.
Im had nine birdies, with bogeys at the start and toward the end, for his 63.