John Pak holds the 36-hole lead at the Club Car Championship at The Landings Golf & Athletic Club on the Korn Ferry Tour, but Davis Lamb and Roger Sloan are closing in fast after matching 63s in Round 2.
After two rounds at The Landings Golf & Athletic Club in Savannah, Georgia, John Pak sits atop the leaderboard at the Club Car Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour. The American carded a second-round 68, adding six birdies while giving two shots back with a pair of bogeys, to reach a 36-hole total of 129. It was a solid if unspectacular effort — enough to hold the lead, but barely, as the chasing pack surged on a day when low scoring was very much the theme.
The round’s most eye-catching performance came from Davis Lamb, who put together a flawless nine-birdie, bogey-free 63 to move into second place at 132 overall. Lamb’s round was the best of the day alongside Roger Sloan’s matching 63, and both players announced themselves as genuine contenders heading into the weekend. Sloan, from Canada, was the day’s biggest mover in the field, climbing 94 places from position 103 all the way to a tie for sixth. Playing from the 10th tee, Sloan strung together nine birdies without a single dropped shot — a composed and relentless display across 18 holes.
Korn Ferry Tour: Eagles, a hole-in-one and a tightly packed leaderboard
Three players share third place at 133: Joseph Bramlett, who fired a bogey-free 66 with six birdies from the 10th tee; Blades Brown, who eagled the par-5 3rd hole on his way to a 67; and Nick Infanti, whose 64 included an eagle on the par-4 1st hole alongside seven birdies and just one bogey. Infanti’s round was one of the most efficient of the day at eight under par.
The highlight of Round 2, however, belonged to Jeff Overton. The American made a hole-in-one on the par-3 2nd hole, the only ace of the tournament so far. Overton finished the round at 68, good for a share of 18th place on the overall leaderboard.
Mason Andersen was the day’s biggest climber, moving up 97 positions from 119th to 22nd. He carded a bogey-free 64 from the 10th tee, with eight birdies, to reach 136 overall. Fellow American Taylor Montgomery produced a round that swung both ways — a double bogey on the par-4 4th hole was quickly followed by an eagle on the par-4 5th, one of the course’s most yielding holes, which played to an average of 3.51 on the day. Montgomery finished at 69 to sit in a share of sixth.
The course’s par-3 12th proved the most punishing hole of the day, playing to an average of 3.16 with 34 bogeys and only 14 birdies. The par-3 8th was similarly tough, while the par-4 9th also played over par on average.
Among the German players in the field, Jeremy Paul posted a second-round 71 to sit in a tie for 64th at 139 overall, while Thomas Rosenmueller — who returned a bogey-free 70 in Round 2 — missed the cut with a 142 total. Englishman Ben Taylor and Scotsman Russell Knox, both playing on the Korn Ferry Tour this week, made the cut at 138, with Knox’s round featuring an eagle on the par-5 3rd hole.
With two rounds remaining, Pak’s three-shot cushion over Lamb is by no means safe on a course that continues to give up low numbers to those who keep the ball in play.
This article was created with the help of AI and editorially reviewed.