- Adam Scott and Cam Davis have not progressed either
- Min Woo Lee recovered before falling behind
- The day is the last hope for Australians
A hole in the rewriting of 46 years of Masters history, Jason Day will continue to swear inside and waiting for the putts to fall after having given themselves a chance to fight Masters.
The Australian was on the right track to become the first man to pass without Bogey through the first 36 holes of the tournament from Ed Sneed in 1979, until his first imperfection on the 18th green on Friday.
10 years ago, the winner of the PGA championship was satisfied with his second round of two people under 70 to be four sous and four shots from leader Justin Rose entering the weekend.
He had at least four looks on Birdie to move in the two shots of the head on the nine rear, but could only reject the head back while the putts passed or did not fall below.
The wind became a postman late Friday, the day caught the 18th green and then missed an eight -foot putt in its only slip stroke so far.
“Inside, I’m like swearing myself,” he said about his almost-me of the green. “But … this golf course … it can frustrate you. When you lack putts and you give yourself opportunities, that’s what it is.
Jason Day is the last aussie on the left standing at the Masters in Augusta and hopes to make history by winning the jug of Blaret

Aussie Cameron Smith, a former open winner, collapsed on the second day

Another Australian hope, Min Woo Lee, had a difficult start which finally meant that he also missed the Cup
“I have the impression that the statistics will soon turn for me, and I hope it is this weekend.
“If I can get rolled as I feel, then I feel like I can put myself in the running.”
It was the brilliant light of a miserable day for the other two veterans of the Masters of Australia Adam Scott and Cameron Smith (both five more), which missed the cup by three shots with the Cam Davis outings (nine plus).
Min Woo Lee (one Sous) recovered well with a double Bogey first, moving to two sous before a Bogey the 18 pushed him in front of the top 20.
Scott (77, 72) hovered around the cup line all day, but the damage had been caused on Thursday, the 2013 winner missed the weekend for the first time in 16 years and for the third time in 23 visits.
The 44 -year -old refused requests for an interview after the round.
Smith (71, 78) had never missed the cup during his eight previous visits to Augusta National-where he owns five TOP-10 TOP-10-but had no response to his deterioration after starting the day at a sub-parameter.
“I don’t feel like I was doing so much trouble there and I don’t really know what to do with it,” he said.
“I still like the place, I don’t think there is a bad feeling there. I had rounds like this before here and it can just come to bite you.
“So I can’t wait to come back and do a little better.