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Rickie Fowler first to secure spot in weekend at Cadillac Match Play

By Doug Ferguson
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Rickie Fowler first to secure spot in weekend at Cadillac Match Play

 
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Rickie Fowler made three big putts in a row and won his second straight match Thursday to secure his spot in the round of 16 on the weekend at the Cadillac Match Play Championship. 
 
Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth also won two matches and they still could be going home Friday. 
 
Fowler still has one more match to play on Friday, which effectively is a practice round in the middle of a tournament. By outlasting Shane Lowry on the 18th hole, he is 2-0 in round-robin play and already is assured of having the best record to advance from his four-man group. 
 
"Definitely a stress reliever right there," Fowler said. 
 
McIlroy went the distance to beat Brandt Snedeker, while Billy Horschel had no trouble dispatching Jason Dufner. McIlroy and Horschel are both 2-0 and play Friday to determine who advances to the weekend. 
 
"It's win or go home," McIlroy said. "So it's back to the usual format." 
 
Spieth is looking as dominant as his week at the Masters. He finished off a 4-and-3 victory over Matt Every with 10 straight one-putt greens that totaled about 120 feet, four of those putts just to halve the hole. 
 
"After the one on No. 8 (20 feet), which was to tie the hole, he said, `When are you going to stop doing that?'" Spieth said. "And then after I made the par putt on 14 (18 feet for a halve), I could see he was upset. And if I were in his position, I would have been very upset. Because that was bogus." 
 
 
Lee Westwood escaped with a 1-up victory when Mikko Ilonen missed a 4-foot putt. Westwood also is 2-0 and will play Spieth on Friday to determine who advances. 
 
"It's going to be hard to keep making this many putts and this many birdies," Spieth said. "And I feel like I'm truly going to need that to beat him." 
 
John Senden joined Fowler as the only two players to lock up spots in the round of 16, when the Match Play returns to single elimination. He easily handled Bill Haas, and won his group when Henrik Stenson beat Brendon Todd. Senden already has beaten Stenson and Haas, who each have a 1-1 record. 
 
Otherwise, the second day at TPC Harding Park brought out a strange element for match play – scoreboard watching. 
 
J.B. Holmes went 19 holes to beat Russell Henley and then stayed on the course to watch the match behind him. He knew Brooks Koepka had to win or else Holmes would be eliminated. Koepka won the last three holes and wound up beating Marc Warren of Scotland. 
 
Fowler knew he would win his group provided Harris English beat Graeme McDowell, because Fowler had already defeated English. McDowell had a 3-up lead until English rallied to win five out of six holes for a 2-and-1 victory. 
 
"I knew if I won and Harris won, I had a chance at being locked," Fowler said. "Obviously, all I can do is take care of my match. Didn't exactly take care of it the way I wanted to. And the end of the day, I'm happy with it." 
 
 
The match was all square when Fowler made a 15-foot putt to halve the 15th hole, an 18-foot putt to halve the 16th hole and a 30-foot putt to halve the 17th. A birdie on the par-5 18th hole gave Fowler a 2-0 record and a match Friday against McDowell that is irrelevant. 
 
"Obviously, I still want to go out and play a good match and win the match," Fowler said. "In a way, it will give me time to work on stuff and ... see if we can tighten the game up a little bit." 
 
In other matches: 
 
-- Bubba Watson and Louis Oosthuizen each won their matches to set up a win-or-go home match Friday in their group. Watson beat Keegan Bradley, now how has lost his last seven singles matches in Match Play, the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup. 
 
-- Gary Woodland put away Ian Poulter, the Ryder Cup wizard who now has lost his last three matches in this tournament. That means Woodland and Webb Simpson, who beat Jimmy Walker, will play Friday for the right to advance. 
 
-- Thongchai Jaidee defeated Jim Furyk, and George Coetzee rallied to beat Martin Kaymer. Everyone in that group is 1-1, so a head-to-head tiebreaker will be used for winners to see who advances. That's also the case in the group with Sergio Garcia, Bernd Wiesberger, Tommy Fleetwood and Jamie Donaldson. 
 
McIlroy and Horschel have some history, though it's ancient at that. They faced each other in the 2007 Walker Cup, and McIlroy was a little irritated by what he perceived to be excessive emotions from Horschel. They split the two matches they played. Both have talked and laughed about those days, and there are no ill feelings. Then again, they haven't played each other in match play since then. 
 
"Back then, we were a little bit younger and a little more emotional," McIlroy said. "So it was pretty heated. I don't think tomorrow will be quite so much like that. But still, you need to win or go home. So it's an important game." 
 
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