Perry stays two ahead at wet River Highlands

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – American Kenny Perry  maintained his two-shot lead in Friday’s weather-hit second  round of the Travelers Championship in Cromwell, Connecticut  despite struggling with the pace of the greens.

The PGA Tour veteran, two ahead overnight after opening with  a sparkling 61, parred his last 10 holes at the TPC River  Highlands to card a two-under 68.

That left Perry at 11-under 129, with compatriot Ryan Moore  alone in second after a six-birdie 65.

Americans Colt Knost (66) and PGA Tour rookie Aaron Watkins  (67) were a further stroke back at eight under while U.S. Open  champion Lucas Glover was at four under after following a  first-round 65 with a 71.

Play was suspended at 1626 local time (2026 GMT) with  thunderstorms rolling into the area and no further action was  possible for the rest of the day.

Among those yet to complete the second round, U.S. Ryder Cup  player Anthony Kim was at eight under with five holes remaining,  level with compatriots Paul Goydos, David Toms and Spencer  Levin.

Goydos and 2001 PGA Championship winner Toms also had five  holes remaining while Levin had completed nine.

Perry, who flirted with a magical 59 before equalling the  course record on Thursday, failed to increase his lead despite  striking the ball even better yesterday.

“I hit a lot more quality, longer irons today,” the  48-year-old told reporters. “It was fun out there. I had control  of the ball and hit it nice but just couldn’t get the speed (on  the greens).

“I hit 16 greens and didn’t miss a fairway but I had 32  putts. I had 25 yesterday so that’s seven strokes. I’m in good  shape though and happy with the round.”

Perry, beaten in a three-way playoff at this year’s U.S.  Masters, started at the 10th hole and mixed three birdies with  his first bogey of the week, at the par-four 14th, to reach the  turn in two-under 33 before parring the last nine.

“I kept hitting it in there 15 feet from the hole,” said  Perry, who won his 13th PGA Tour title at the Phoenix Open in  February. “It’s a putt you think you should make but you  probably don’t make many of them.

“I just kept hitting that range all day. I had a couple of  close ones and I think I made one putt over six feet today. It  was just a frustrating day on the greens.”

Spanish world number four Sergio Garcia, the highest-ranked  player in the field, was flirting with the cut after staying at  three under with five holes to play.

The cut was projected to fall at three-under 137 with  Britain’s Justin Rose, Swede Daniel Chopra and defending  champion Stewart Cink of the U.S. among those in danger of  making early exits.