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Will Zalatoris emerges atop leaderboard at PGA Championship on Friday

Justin Thomas hits from the bunker on the 14th hole during the second round of the PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club on Friday in Tulsa, Okla. (AP photo)

TULSA, Okla. — The wind finally relented Friday in the PGA Championship. Will Zalatoris never did.

From the fairway or the rough, Zalatoris kept hitting the golf ball on the button at Southern Hills and took advantage of gentler conditions late in the afternoon for a 4-under 66, giving him a one-shot lead over Mito Pereira of Chile.

The weekend will include Tiger Woods in his second straight major, a remarkable achievement in its own right.

Playing on a battered right leg from his car crash 15 months ago, Woods was outside the cut line after a double bogey on the par-3 11th hole. He played the final seven holes with two birdies and a pair of 15-foot par saves for a 69 to make it with one shot to spare.

But he’s 12 shots away from Zalatoris, the 25-year-old from Dallas who is built like a 1-iron and could probably hit one flush with his eyes closed.

No doubt, Zalatoris and his entire side of the draw was helped when wind that gusted over 30 mph Friday morning laid down over the final two hours.

Bubba Watson had a shot at the first 62 in PGA Championship history. He missed from just inside 25 feet on the 18th hole and had to settle for the 18th round of 63 in this major, and the third at Southern Hills. He joined Woods (2007) and Raymond Floyd (1982).

Pereira also had a chance at 63, missing from 7 feet on the ninth hole to close his round.

“I lucked out with the draw, for sure. We played 11 on without any wind,” Zalatoris said. “When I got out of position, I got the most out of it.”

He opened with a shot from the rough that tumbled across the length of the green to 2 feet. He hit another through a gap in the trees to 7 feet. Not only did he have a bogey-free card, all five of his birdies were inside 8 feet.

Zalatoris was at 9-under 131.

And all Justin Thomas could do was watch from the couch of his rental home in Tulsa.

Thomas did the heavy lifting in the morning, when the wind was raging and limbs were swaying. He dropped only one shot on his way to another 67 that set a daunting target for Rory McIlroy and everyone else in the afternoon.

And now Thomas is three shots behind, with Watson right behind him.

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