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imageSPRINGFIELD: Jimmy Walker, who missed the cut in three of his past four major starts, fired a five-under-par 65 Thursday to grab a one-shot lead in the first round of the PGA Championship.

The 37-year-old American, whose best major showing in 17 starts was a share of seventh at the 2014 PGA, owned a one-stroke lead over Argentina's Emiliano Grillo on a day when stars Rory McIlroy and Phil Mickelson struggled at par-70 Baltusrol.

"All in all it was a great day," Walker said. "I feel like I've prepared and I'm ready to go this week. It's nice that's what showed. I felt like I was ready to go. Winning a major is huge. Three more days to go."

Two strokes adrift were England's Andy Sullivan and Americans James Hahn and Harris English.

"It's a good start but there's a long way to go," Sullivan said.

Groundskeepers were spraying water on certain greens between groups to keep putting surfaces from burning out in the heat, although thunderstorms are forecast the next three days.

Walker, a back-nine starter, followed his lone bogey at the sixth with a 31-foot birdie putt at the seventh to grab the lead. Two closing pars kept him there and had him pondering possibilities in a year that has already produced three first-time major winners.

"I don't think it's coincidence or anything," Walker said. "They are all good players and it was just a matter of time. So just keep that rolling."

Walker opened with birdies at the 13th and 15th holes, a 10-foot birdie putt at 16 and back-to-back birdies at the par-5 18th and par-4 first, the latter on a 20-foot putt.

- Day fights through for 68 -

Defending champion and world number one Jason Day of Australia shot 68 to hang three off the pace despite fighting fatigue and illness and playing only one practice round. He had the best spot of any major winner on the leaderboard.

"Missed a lot of opportunities. I haven't had the greatest putting display," Day said. "I'm pretty pleased. I hit a lot of quality shots. To hit it where I wanted and execute like I did, really positive going into the next three days."

Unheralded players topped the leaderboard while big names stumbled as four-time major winner McIlroy, ranked fourth, fired a birdie-free 74.

"I just really struggled on the greens. I had a couple chances I didn't convert," McIlroy said. "It just wasn't my day. I'll work on the putting green before I tee off tomorrow. I haven't won this tournament from this position before so I'll have my work cut out for me."

Five-time major winner Mickelson, a 10th-tee starter fresh off a British Open runner-up effort, made four bogeys in his first 11 holes but charged in with three birdies for a 71.

"I'm proud of the way I hung in there and fought and got three back coming in," Mickelson said. "If I can shoot in the 60s tomorrow I can get back in it.

"To make a bogey on 18, the only real birdie hole, I threw away a lot of shots. It's not the start I wanted. It's not indicative of the way I'm playing."

Afternoon starters fared no better with Aussie John Senden, three under with seven holes to play, making the best charge for the lead.

British Open winner Henrik Stenson of Sweden went birdie-bogey on the second and third holes while US Open winner Dustin Johnson took double-bogey at three, fellow American Patrick Reed opened bogey-bogey and two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson had a birdie at the second but bogeys at the fourth and fifth.

"It's very tricky out there," Grillo said. "If you miss the greens in the wrong spot, you're going to have trouble getting up and down. It's a very hard course."

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2016

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