Bud Cauley had to reach deep into his bag of tricks on Friday to shoot a bogey-free 66 and seize a share of the lead at the halfway mark of the Texas Open.
Cauley, who is seeking his first win on the US PGA Tour, missed eight of 18 greens but managed to scramble each time and make par.
He tallied six birdies and 12 pars in blustery conditions
to finish in a tie with fellow American Tony Finau at eight-under 136 at the TPC San Antonio. Finau shot a seven-under 65. “It saved me a lot today,” he said of his short game.
“It was windy out there today. It was tough. I knew I was going to miss some greens. I was able to leave it in the right spot most of the time and saved some shots out there.”
“It seems like every hole is almost straight down or straight in so you know what you are getting. You just have to try and par the holes that are into the wind.”
This is Cauley’s 108th start on the Tour without a win and his first career co-lead or outright lead after 36 holes.
“Putting saved me a lot today,” Cauley said, “and the putt (to save par) at 17 was huge. It was windy, and I knew I was going
to miss some greens. When I did, I was able to leave it in a relatively easy spot and get up and down.”
He can take comfort in the fact that four of the last six 36 hole leaders have gone on to win the Texas Open.
Finau had a roller-coaster ride Friday with eight birdies, one eagle and three bogeys.
He made an excellent read on a downward sloping putt for birdie on the 10th hole and then got up and down from 83 yards for another birdie on the par-five 14th, the easiest hole of the tournament.”
“Yesterday I got behind the eight ball pretty fast,” said Finau of his opening 71.
“Today I was able to get off to a better start and you need that on this golf course.”
Finau holed a wedge shot from 105 yards for eagle on No. 11. A 22-foot birdie putt at 16 and a tap-in birdie on the next hole had him looking at tying the course record.
After his approach landed in shallow water in the creek fronting the 18th green, Finau played it out and chipped it past the green, rather than take the penalty drop.
“I did the same thing yesterday after going for the green (in two),” Finau said.
“About half of the ball was out of the water. I got up-and-down yesterday. I know lightning doesn’t always strike twice.”
Cameron Smith (65), Bob Estes (69), Kevin Chappell (68) and Robby Shelton (69) were one stroke back of the leaders and tied for third at 137.

Leading second-round scores
136 — Bud Cauley 70-66, Tony Finau 71-65
137 — Cameron Smith (AUS) 72-65, Bob Estes 68-69, Kevin Chappell 69-68, Robby Shelton 68-69
138 — John Huh 67-71, Jonathan Randolph 68-70, Kevin Tway 70-68
139 — Ollie Schniederjans 72-67, Martin Laird (SCO) 72-67, Jimmy Walker 70-69, Carl Pettersson (SWE) 73-66, Branden Grace (RSA) 66-73, Aaron Baddeley AUS) 69-70, Kang Sung (KOR) 69-70
140 — Ken Duke 68-72, Jhonattan Vegas (VEN) 69-71, Brian Gay 68-72, Michael Thompson 70-70, Ryan Brehm 71-69, Freddie Jacobson (SWE) 69-71, J.J. Spaun 73-67, Ryan Moore 70-70, Tom Hoge 68-72.
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