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Day makes move on Friday, shares lead

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HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC - APRIL 15:  Jason Day hits a tee shot on the 11th hole during the second round of the 2016 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links on April 15, 2016 in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.  (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC - APRIL 15: Jason Day hits a tee shot on the 11th hole during the second round of the 2016 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links on April 15, 2016 in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

The world's No. 1 player made moves on Friday at Harbour Town



    Written by The Associated Press

    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. -- Jason Day is back at the top in a bid for his third PGA TOUR title in a month.

    Coming off a disappointing Masters, the top-ranked Day shot a 2-under 69 on Friday at the RBC Heritage to share the second-round lead with Kevin Chappell and Charley Hoffman.

    Chappell and Hoffman shot 68s for the second straight day to match Day at 6-under 136.

    Luke Donald, tied for the first-round lead after a 66, was a stroke back along with Russell Knox and Patton Kizzire. Donald had a 71. Knox shot a 65, the best round of the week. Kizzire had a 68.


    RBC HERITAGE: Leaderboard | Round 3 tee times | Highlights | FedExCup Points


    Past tournament champion Matt Kuchar topped the group at 4 under after a 71.

    Day has won two of the past three times he's entered, starting with a one-shot victory over Chappell a month ago in the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Day followed that with a victory at the World Golf Championships-Dell Match Play and was a strong choice to slip on his first green jacket last week at Augusta National. Instead, Day tied for 10th and was never truly part of the drama in Jordan Spieth's late collapse and Danny Willett's triumph.

    Now, Day is fighting off the fatigue and finding success again at Harbour Town Golf Links.

    "I felt like I was kind of punch-drunk a little bit," he said of Thursday's start. "But came out today a lot more alert and on top of it."

    That's bad news for the rest of the field because Day has shown there aren't many who can match him when he's playing like this.

    "I may be a little bit mentally fatigued, but it's not an excuse," he said. "I need to get out there and hit the shots and focus."

    Day hit the shots he needed at the most crucial times.

    Starting on No. 10 a shot behind co-leaders Luke Donald and Branden Grace, Day could not get going in the chilly, damp conditions. He kick-started the round with a birdie on the wind-swept, lighthouse 18th, rolling in a 10-footer.

    Birdies on the second and third moved him on top. When he fell a stroke behind Chappell with a bogey on the par-5 fifth, Day hit his drive out of bounds. He recovered with a birdie on No. 6.

    Day felt the weight of the past few weeks of winning golf on the fifth green as he lined up the 4-foot putt needed to limit the damage from his bad drive. That's when he channeled the mindset he's had since last summer when he won the PGA Championship.

    "Moments like that where you get to a breaking point, where you go, `OK, I'm starting to lose focus now.' Because I was playing great, but it went out of bounds. I can't think about it. I've just got to keep pushing on."

    Chappell's pushing on, too.

    He has earned more than $1.4 million in 11 events this year, the bulk from two runner-up finishes. Chappell's best showing in his nine other tournaments was a tie for 26th at the Northern Trust Open.

    "My game didn't go anywhere," Chappell said. "I'm still on form and really excited to be here and really excited about where things are at."

    Hoffman, who held the 54-hole lead here in 2013, had a tying birdie on the difficult par-4 eighth hole, then scrambled for par from the pine straw when his drive on No. 9 landed near the merchandise tent.

    "Once you get in the lead, you can't let up, you've got to keep making birdies," Hoffman said. "That's what Tiger did so well during the early 2000s and that's what I'm going to try and do on the weekend."

    Several players withdrew Friday. Harris English left before his round began, citing a wrist injury.

    Tommy "Two Gloves" Gainey withdrew because of a lower back injury after playing 11 holes and well in front of the cut line at even-par. Two-time heart transplant recipient Erik Compton also left after nine holes.

    New pro Bryson DeChambeau continued to be a quick study on the PGA TOUR, shooting a 69 to stand just three shots off the lead at 3 under. DeChambeau, the NCAA and U.S. Amateur champion last year, turned pro this week.

    Jason Bohn rallied for a 69 and made the cut in his first tournament since his heart attack at The Honda Classic in February. "I put a little stress on the old ticker today, so that's good," Bohn said.

    Among those missing the 2-over cut were Paul Casey, who finished fourth last week at the Masters.