Collin Morikawa showed no sign of inexperience when surging into the lead on his British Open debut at nine under par after a second-round score of 64 on Friday.
The American is making his first appearance at the Open Championship and played for the first time on British soil last week at the Scottish Open, where he finished in a tie for 71st.
“I wouldn’t be here through these two rounds if I hadn’t played last week at the Scottish,” said Morikawa.
“It was a huge learning opportunity. I went into last week wanting to win but I came out of it learning a lot more and that thankfully helped for this week.”
The 24-year-old has already shown an ability to raise his game for the big occasion during his short career and he did so again with a round of six under at Royal St George’s.
In just seven previous Major appearances, Morikawa has finished in the top 10 three times, including victory at last year’s US PGA championship.
The last debutant to win on his Open debut was Ben Curtis in 2003, also at Royal St George’s.
But while Curtis was a rank outsider who never matched the heights of his golden week in Sandwich, Morikawa is already ranked fourth in the world.
Starting out on Friday at three under, Morikawa picked up two shots in the first seven holes before hitting his stride around the turn.
Birdies at 8, 9, 11, 12 and 14 briefly took him to 10 under before he dropped his only shot of the day at the par-four 15th.
Another birdie putt on the 18th hit the lip of the cup and stayed out, but Morikawa was still three shots in front of overnight leader Louis Oosthuizen, who will begin his second round later at six under.
A fast start from Jordan Spieth cut Morikawa’s advantage to two shots as the 2017 Open champion moved to seven under with two birdies on the opening two holes.
South African Daniel van Tonder, Argentina’s Emiliano Grillo and German Marcel Siem are in the clubhouse on six under.
Cameron Smith and English duo Andy Sullivan and Danny Willett moved to five under on a perfect day for low scores under blue skies and a soft wind.
Tony Finau, the only player to finish in the top 10 at both the two previous British Opens in 2018 and 2019, also made his move with a 66 to get to four under.
Rory McIlroy is in danger of missing the cut for a second consecutive Open Championship.
Resuming at level par, the Northern Irishman bogeyed the opening two holes.
The four-time Major champion recovered from that poor start with birdies at 4 and 9, but back-to-back bogeys at 16 and 17 left him on the projected cut mark of one over par.
Phil Mickelson will miss the weekend after his nightmare 10-over-par round of 80 on Thursday.
The US PGA champion made a better fist of his second round but finished on two over for the day.
© Agence France-Presse