Aberg Golfer Carries One-Bogey Friday Into PGA Weekend

aberg golfer Ludvig Åberg turned a quiet Friday at Aronimink Golf Club into a position worth watching at the PGA Championship. He made just one bogey, hit 17 greens in regulation and went from longshot territory to the weekend with a real chance to win.Aronimink Golf Club FridayÅberg’s round came at…

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Aberg Golfer Carries One-Bogey Friday Into PGA Weekend

aberg golfer Ludvig Åberg turned a quiet Friday at Aronimink Golf Club into a position worth watching at the PGA Championship. He made just one bogey, hit 17 greens in regulation and went from longshot territory to the weekend with a real chance to win.

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Aronimink Golf Club Friday

Åberg’s round came at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pa., where Round 2 left the leaderboard tight and the margins thin. He ranked fifth in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green and fourth in Approach, the kind of ball-striking that kept him moving when others were fighting the course.

That Friday effort followed a Thursday night number of +7600, a spot that did not suggest he would be one of the names carrying the weekend conversation. Instead, he controlled the round with precision and limited damage to a single bogey.

Åberg’s PGA Championship climb

The performance also broke a pattern. Entering the week, Åberg had never made a cut at the PGA Championship in his young career, so a weekend start already carried more weight than a routine top-20 run. He was not merely surviving the cut line; he was moving into prime position to win.

That shift mattered because the field stayed crowded. Maverick McNealy and Alex Smalley were a single shot clear at 4-under par after Round 2, 21 players were in red numbers from the 156-player field, and no player was more than eight strokes off the lead. Åberg did not need a runaway round to stay in it. He only needed to stay clean, and he did.

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McNealy, Smalley, Schauffele

Xander Schauffele also tracked back through the field after opening with a 2-under 68 and then slipping to 3-over 73. That left Åberg inside a pack where one sharp round could matter more than a big name on the board.

If conditions soften, Åberg has the full arsenal to take flight and post a number that others may not be able to match. His Friday showed the route: fairways and greens, few mistakes, and enough control to enter the weekend among the players most likely to chase down the leaders.

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Sports journalist reporting on tennis, golf, and international sports events. Credentialed at Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Masters.