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Adam
Scott extends lead to three shots
Adam Scott figured there was no point wasting his good
play to take money from his mates in Australia. So he cut
short his trip home to get back on the PGA Tour.
“I came here to get in contention and win a golf
tournament,” said Scott, who stayed home only a week
after the Masters. “I feel like I’ve been playing
well this year and haven’t quite done it. So I’m
kind of pushing myself a little bit to do that.”
He only needs one more good round to win the EDS Byron
Nelson Championship.
Scott took a three-stroke lead into the final round after
a 3-under 67 Saturday got him to 8-under 202. He birdied
two of the last three holes, including a 3 1/2 -footer
at the 429-yard 18th.
“It all depends on Adam,” said Bart Bryant,
among the quartet of players three strokes behind. “Obviously,
he’s a world-class player. He has the potential to
go out and kind of run away with it.”
Scott, at No. 10 in the world the highest-ranked player
in the field, again topped the leaderboard after his solid
finish Saturday, and Kevin Sutherland’s bad one.
Sutherland, whose only PGA Tour victory came six years
ago, was at 7 under with a one-stroke lead over Scott until
bogeys on the final two holes.
After missing a 7-foot par putt on the 198-yard 17th hole,
Sutherland pushed his final tee shot way right into heavy
rough—and was still in the rough after his punch
shot. He finally got to the front edge of the green and
two-putted from 70 feet.
“I have to remember what I did before that,” Sutherland
said. “I had a good rhythm going, a good feeling
and tried to keep doing that. … I kind of got away
from that maybe at the end.”
Sutherland (67), Bryant (67), Charley Hoffman (68) and
Ryan Moore (68) made up the closest group chasing Scott.
Sergio Garcia, after a season-best 65, was four strokes
back along with Dudley Hart (66) and Jesper Parnevik (68).
While Sutherland was getting spectators moved out of the
way for his first shot out of the rough at 18, Scott missed
a chance for a bigger margin when his 9-foot birdie attempt
at the 504-yard 15th hole drifted left only inches away
from the hole. But Scott didn’t wait long for another
birdie chance.
Scott missed the fairway on the par-5 16th, layed up into
the fairway and put his approach shot inside 6 feet to
set up a birdie. After his aggressive birdie attempt at
17 rolled 6 feet past the hole, Scott’s approach
at 18 was right on the pin.
In his only other Nelson appearance two years ago, Scott
shared the lead at the end of each of the first three rounds.
A closing 71 left him in third place behind Brett Wetterich
and Trevor Immelman, who missed the Nelson cut this year
in his first tournament since winning the Masters.
“I’ve got something to prove,” Scott
said, recalling 2006. “I’d like to play how
I have the last couple of days, just in a nice rhythm.”
Scott’s third round began with his opening tee shot
landing in a fairway bunker, though he saved par with a
two-putt from 17 feet before missing a 6-foot-par chance
at the 221-yard second hole. There were consecutive birdies
before Scott missed the fairway at the 451-yard eighth
for a bogey, his last of the day.
“It was a bit of a slow start for me. I never really
got going on the front and let everybody catch up,” Scott
said. “I knew a solid nine holes would do me good. … No.
16 and 18 were key. I finished the day with a couple of
nice wedge shots, and that makes it a little buffer going
into (Sunday).”
Until the end, things were going well for Sutherland.
After his 4-foot birdie at the 174-yard 5th hole, he reached
the 542-yard 7th in two shots and had to make only an 8-footer
for eagle. He added birdies at Nos. 11 and 13 before the
unwanted ending.
“I hit the ball terrific. The first 14 holes, I
really didn’t miss a shot,” Sutherland said. “It
would be a little different if I bogeyed the first two
holes and birdied the last two holes obviously. … Right
now, you kind of stew a little bit on it. But (Sunday),
I can’t remember it.”
The redone TPC Four Seasons course could play much differently
for the final round because of an overnight forecast for
inclement weather and more than an inch of rain. Tournament
officials will use threesomes Sunday, teeing off from Nos.
1 and 10.
Garcia, the 2004 Nelson champion, had three birdies his
first seven holes, starting with an approach to 7 feet
on the opening hole. His only bogey came at No. 8, when
he had his only three-putt—from 72 feet. He added
three more birdies after that.
His best scoring round of the season came despite hitting
only two of 14 fairways. Garcia baled himself out of trouble
with his short game and his putter, an 8-year-old one he
recently pulled out of his old bags. He needed only 27
putts.
“I loved it as soon as I put it down. It just gave
me a good vibe,” Garcia said. “It’s just
that old feeling from years back when you did well and
you holed putts and stuff.” |