SPRINGFIELD, N.J. – While five-time major winner Phil Mickelson drove it left onto Shunpike Road to start his afternoon and first-round leader Jimmy Walker drove it left into a hospitality tent coming home to the clubhouse near evening, formerly struggling Robert Streb hit it straight and true Friday at the 98th PGA Championship, all the way to a record-tying 63 and share of the second-round lead.
A 63 now has been shot 28 times in major-championship history, and three times already in the past two weeks after Mickelson did so to start the British Open and Henrik Stenson finished with one to beat Mickelson for the Claret Jug at Troon.
Four of those 63s have come at Baltusrol Golf Club, where Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf each shot one in the 1980 U.S. Open and Thomas Bjorn did the same at the 2005 PGA.
"Happy to be part of that 63 Club, I guess," Streb said after Friday's eight-birdie, one-bogey round tied him with Walker for the lead at 9 under par heading into the weekend. Their two-day 131s tie the PGA's 36-hole scoring mark shared by seven others.
He's happy, too, to have left behind what he called the disappointment of April's Masters and June's U.S. Open during a season when he missed the cut in the first three majors and hasn't made the cut in one since a tie for 10th place at last year's PGA Championship at Whistling Straits. He won a PGA Tour event last year, but his best finish this year is a tie for 18th.
A Kansas State alumnus who spent winters playing hockey and summers golfing while he grew up in Oklahoma City, Streb won nearly $4 million in 2015 but only a little more than $665,000 so far this year now at age 29.
"Just struggled with my expectations a bit," he said. "I kind of thought it would keep going, and it has been tough. Probably learned the hard way that you've got to start over again."
He said he "found something" in his swing two weeks ago, which he used to make the cut and shoot a Saturday 66 at last week's RBC Canadian Open on his way to Baltusrol.