Rory McIlroy at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Alamy Stock Photo

Rory McIlroy continues Pebble Beach defence with second-round 67

McIlroy is six shots off the lead in a share of 17th place while Shane Lowry is one shot further back.

RORY MCILROY HAS continued his defence of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am with a five-under 67 in the second round to sit six shots behind the joint leaders Akshay Bhatia of America and Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune.

McIlroy, who opened with a 68 yesterday, was four-under through seven after an eagle on the second, and birdies at the fourth and seventh holes. A bogey followed on the 10th before a pair of birdies at 11 and 12, and another dropped shot on the 14th.

A brilliant putt on the last gave McIlroy his fifth birdie of the day to take a share of 17th place on nine-under.

Shane Lowry is one shot further back after signing off his second round with a three-under 69. He started on the back nine and opened with a birdie on the first hole.

Back-to-back birdies followed at 14 and 15, and after slipping with bogeys at the first and third hole, Lowry produced a strong finish with two more birdies at four and eight.

The Pro-Am is a signature event on the PGA Tour, and marks McIlroy and Lowry’s first American event of 2026. 

Players play a round at Spyglass Hill and Pebble Beach across the Thursday and Friday rounds, before the field returns to Pebble Beach for the weekend.  

Bhatia joined Hisatsune at the top of the leaderboard on 15-under par, with a resurgent Rickie Fowler hot on their heels.

California-born Bhatia scored 64, with back-to-back bogey-free rounds to join overnight leader Hisatsune at the pinnacle.

It comes off the back of 24-year-old Bhatia’s joint-third-placed finish at last week’s Phoenix Open.

“Just building off last week. Played really nice last week, just starting to kind of catch my groove,” said Bhatia, who has two previous PGA Tour wins to his name.

Bhatia enjoyed six birdies and an eagle at the par-five 14th, where he chipped in from 47 feet out in the rough.

“I feel like my golf swing’s in a really nice spot, shot options are in a really nice spot and starting to see some putts fall,” he said.

Meanwhile Japan’s Hisatsune built on his career-best 10-under opening round with a fine five-under par 67.

He bogeyed both the 18th and 1st as he made the turn at Spyglass Hill — one of two in use for the event’s first two days — but regained his composure and eagled the par-five seventh and birdied the ninth for a strong finish.

The 23-year-old from Okayama, who won the 2023 Open de France on the DP World Tour, has been stepping it up in pursuit of a first US PGA Tour title.

After a tie for second behind runaway winner Justin Rose at Torrey Pines, Hisatsune held the halfway lead at the Phoenix Open last week, before finishing 10th.

Rickie Fowler also carded 64 to end the day in joint third place, on 14-under par, with Sam Burns.

Fowler bogeyed the 14th but produced an otherwise flawless round featuring nine birdies.

Chasing his first PGA Tour win since 2023, 37-year-old Fowler is on the mend after battling through injury in a 2025 season that saw him briefly drop outside the world top-100.

“My shoulder was bad all last year so I was just trying to manage and get through as best that I could,” he said.

“My body and shoulder feel a lot better than it did last year,” added Fowler.

Elsewhere, Harris English carded the day’s best round with a bogey-free 63, featuring nine birdies, to bounce back from a disappointing opening-round 73 and reach eight-under at the event’s halfway mark.

World number one Scottie Scheffler crept back up the leaderboard with a second round of 66, putting him six-under for the tournament after an erratic opening round of 72.

Scheffler again looked wobbly on his first few holes, including a bogey on the 13th, but after a run of birdies he chipped in from 65 yards for an eagle on the seventh.

“I felt like I played better again than my score today, which is pretty frustrating, but was able to get some stuff going on the back nine,” he said.

“So at least a respectable score today versus yesterday, (which) wasn’t very respectable.”

– © AFP 2026

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