Teen Blades Brown shoots 60 to share PGA La Quinta lead with Scheffler
Teenager Blades Brown fired a spectacular 12-under par 60 to join world number one Scottie Scheffler atop the leaderboard early in the second round of the PGA Tour American Express in La Quinta, California, on Friday.
The 18-year-old from Tennessee became the youngest player in tour history to shoot 60 or lower -- just missing out on a 59 when his birdie putt at his final hole slipped by on the right side.
"I'm so stoked to have shot 60 on the PGA Tour," Brown said, acknowledging that nerves "absolutely" kicked in over the final three holes.
He had made a dazzling start on the Nicklaus Tournament course, one of three in use over the first three rounds of the event.
Brown, who made his pro debut at La Quinta last year, teed off on 10 and was eight under through his first seven holes thanks to an eagle and six birdies.
After a birdie at the second he strung together three more at the fourth, fifth and sixth to reach 12-under for the day.
He couldn't capitalize on the par-five seventh, settling for a par after his second shot found the rough.
He had one more chance at the 16th sub-60 round ever on the PGA Tour at the par-four ninth, where a mammoth drive and a crisp wedge left him a birdie chance he couldn't convert.
"Actually, I was pretty calm," he said of the final putt. "I said, 'OK, I'm going to execute the shot that I know I can. I'm going to putt this line that I see.'
"Unfortunately it didn't go in, but I'm really happy with the outcome I had today."
It was the continuation of a whirlwind week for Brown, who finished tied for 17th in the Korn Ferry developmental tour event in the Bahamas on Wednesday, then, with a sponsor's exemption to play in La Quinta, made his way to California in time to tee it up on Thursday.
He goes into the weekend tied on 17-under 127 with Scheffler, who had eight birdies in his eight-under 64 on the Nicklaus Tournament course.
Scheffler is making his season debut after a 2025 campaign that included two major titles among his six wins.
Thrilled to have his name next to Scheffler's atop the leaderboard, Brown wasn't getting ahead of himself.
"We're halfway there. We've got a lot of golf to go," he said, adding that his next order of business would be getting some rest.
"I'm going to go take a nap," Brown said.
The leading duo were one stroke clear of South Korean Kim Si-Woo, who posted a 65 on the tougher Stadium Course for a 16-under total of 128.
It was a further stroke back to South Korea's Kim Seong-hyeon and American Matt McCarty.
American Andrew Putnam also flirted with a 59 before settling for a 12-under 60 on the La Quinta course that left him 12-under for the tournament.
F.Patel--MT