58! Lowest score in major tour history recorded for 2nd time

58! Lowest score in major tour history recorded for 2nd time

Published Nov. 15, 2016 1:56 p.m. ET

Stephan Jaeger shot a 12-under 58 on Thursday on the Web.com Tour to match the lowest score in major tour play.

And believe it or not, the guy in second place owns an even lower score — and a bigger record.

Rhein Gibson, who's tied for second after his 62 at the Ellie Mae Classic, has the lowest-recorded round ever, a 55 he shot in 2012 at River Oaks Golf Club in Edmond, Oklahoma. It's a Guinness World Record.

Jaeger broke the Web.com Tour record of 59 held by Notah Begay III, Doug Dunakey, Jason Gore, Will Wilcox and Russell Knox. Japan's Ryo Ishikawa also shot a 12-under 58 to win the 2010 Crowns on the Japan Tour. Six players have shot 59 in official PGA Tour events, and Kevin Sutherland on the Champions Tour.

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Jaeger played both nines in 6-under 29. He birdied Nos. 11, 13-17 on his opening nine, and Nos. 1-2, 4-6 and 9 on his second nine.

The 27-year-old German player finished with a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-5 ninth at TPC Stonebrae.

"It went in a little fast for my liking," Jaeger said about his final putt. "On a day like that, it'll go in. ... Right now, I'm actually kind of happy to be done, to be honest with you. It's very stressful for you. It's kind of like going on the back nine on Sunday. I'm happy I performed the way I did. It was the icing on the cake, the last hole obviously."

Jaeger said breaking 60 "pretty much was in my head the whole back nine."

On the final hole, he hit a 3-wood off the tee and hit a layup to 95 yards.

"We had a good strategy for that hole," Jaeger said. "I was going to play it as a three-shot hole and take the bunker out of play off the tee and at worse make par."

Jaeger came to the United States as a foreign exchange student in 2006. He went to high school for two years in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and played in college at Tennessee-Chattanooga, where he was a three-time Southern Conference player of the year.

He got up-and-down for par on the par-4 seventh and barely missed a 30-footer on the par-4 eighth.

"Even the bad shots, I'd get a good bounce and have like 15 feet and I'd hole that," Jaeger said.

In 88-degree heat with the wind at 8-15 mph, Jaeger was more than 11 strokes below the field average of 69.258. His worst hole was a three-putt par on the par-5 third.

"Other than that, everything went my way," Jaeger said.

Jaeger is 102nd on the money list, with the top 25 at end of the season earning PGA Tour cards. The winner Sunday will get $108,000.

"I'd much rather be in the top 25 at the end of the year, with or without the 58," Jaeger said.

Stanford senior Maverick McNealy, the top-ranked amateur in the world, had a 67.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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