The wait was worth it, even if it didn’t work out quite the way Nick Hardy had hoped.
Needing to hole a 21-foot birdie putt from just off the green on TPC Scottsdale’s par-4 ninth to make the cut at the WM Phoenix Open—which he chose to hold off on trying until Saturday morning—the 29-year-old just missed three inches short and to the left. A tap-in par gave him a one-over 72 for his second round and a one-under 141 for the tournament, but was one shot more than he needed to play another 36 holes.
Just a bit short and left :(
Nick Hardy finishes one short of cut line @WMPhoenixOpen
Still met media afterward. Pro’s pro pic.twitter.com/6RGDtO8Eqt
— Kevin Prise (@PGATOURKevin) February 8, 2025
Despite the outcome, Hardy, who was playing in the fourth from the last pairing off the 10th tee when Friday’s second round began, insisted it was the right decision not to attempt the putt in the gloaming, particularly given what was on the line. Prior to the WMPO, the former University of Illinois golfer had missed five straight cuts, dating back to the World Wide Technology Championship in November. He finished 147th on the FedEx Cup points list in 2024, but thanks to winning the 2023 Zurich Classic with Davis Riley, he still had his card for 2025.
So the chance to be fresh for the putt was too big to turn down.
“Look, the sun was down,” Hardy said on Friday evening. “I want to give myself the best chance of making that putt, and the competitor in me wants to hit it now, but I know that the best chance for me to make that putt is to come back tomorrow.”
https://twitter.com/PGATOUR/status/1888067567950119254
Also trying to determine his weekend fate on Saturday morning was Lanto Griffin, who was in a fairway bunker on the par-4 eighth hole when play was suspended Friday. Griffin was at two under for the tournament, needing a pair of pars to make the cut. Upon returning to TPC Scottsdale, he unfortunately missed the green with his approach shot and failed to get up and down for par. On the ninth hole, he set himself up for a 30-foot birdie putt that could have offset the bogey, but came up short in his effort.
All told 77 players made the two-under cutline. Among those right on the number was Emiliano Grillo, whose second round was highlighted by a slam-dunk hole-in-one on the famed par-3 16th Stadium hole.
This article was originally published on golfdigest.com