Saturday, March 03, 2012

RORY McILROY LEADS HONDA CLASSIC BY TWO AFTER ROUND 3

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Florida -- Tiger Woods finished his round before the leaders made the turn Saturday in the Honda Classic, only this time, thousands of fans didn't head for the parking lot. They went looking for the kid who already looks the part as golf's next star.
More fit and with a tighter game than we saw a year ago, Rory McIlroy, pictured, is right where he wants to be -- atop the leaderboard after 54 holes.
Tiger Woods has made a habit of strong Saturday showings to get into contention, but Saturday's 1-under 69 left him well off the pace.
U S Open champion McIlroy put on quite a show at PGA National.
From mangled rough right of the 11th fairway, he measured up a 7-iron from 181 yards and figured it was worth the risk to take on the water in front of the green. The ball cleared the hazard by no more than a yard, and McIlroy seized on the moment by holing a 50-foot birdie from the back of the fringe.
Two par saves were equally important on the back nine, and a birdie from the front bunker on the par-5 18th gave him a 4-under 66, matching the low round of a windy afternoon and giving him a two-shot lead.
That means the 22-year-old from Northern Ireland could move to No. 4 in the FedExCup standings and become the second-youngest player behind Woods to reach No. 1 in the world this week. He would have to win The Honda Classic to make the move and replace Luke Donald atop the ranking.
"I definitely feel like I need to put it out of my mind tomorrow," McIlroy said. "I need to focus on just trying to win this golf tournament. It might be a little difficult."
McIlroy was in a similar spot last week when he reached the final of the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship, knowing a win would make him No. 1. Only this time, there is more than Hunter Mahan in this way.
McIlroy, at 11-under 199, had a two-shot lead over 22-year-old rookie Harris English (66) and 43-year-old Tom Gillis (69). Seven players were within five shots of the lead, a group that includes US PGA champion Keegan Bradley and Masters champion Charl Schwartzel.
The difference from last week?
"I wasn't standing up two up on the first tee in the final," McIlroy said, smiling.
He also realises that it's important not to take a match-play mentality into stroke play, especially with an early start because of approaching storms, with birdies and bogeys around every corner.
Even so, McIlroy is getting accustomed to the pressure, and the scrutiny. Thousands of fans lining every fairway and surrounding every green were cheering him on, and one fan even asked him on the 17th tee what kind of shampoo he uses on those curly brown locks.
"When you get yourself into positions in tournaments like his, it's not just the golf you have to deal with," McIlroy said. "It's everything else that goes on outside that. That's something I feel like I'm a lot more comfortable with. I feel like a better player all around."
Woods finally made a few putts, but not nearly enough to keep pace with everyone else. He went the last 11 holes without a birdie and had to settle for a 69, leaving him nine shots behind.
"I was close to putting a low one up there today," Woods said. "I felt like it could be had, I could make a run and post 5-under par for the day or something like that and get myself within reach. Right now, Rory is playing some great golf."
English, who won on the Nationwide Tour last year while still an amateur, made a 10-foot par save on the 17th and finished with a 66. He will be in the final group, a rare occasion when McIlroy will be playing with someone his own age with a tournament on the line.
They will be joined by Gillis, a journeyman who turned pro a year after McIlroy and English were born. Gillis had the lead to himself on the back nine until a bogey on the par-3 15th. He had a 69.
"It's nice to have the lead going into tomorrow," he said. "I have to try to focus on what I've been trying to do all week, which is hit fairways and hit greens and stay in the present, and not think about everything that could happen.
"I've just got to go out there and try to put a good number on the board."
The wind was at its strongest, though not too severe and the tees were moved forward on the par 3s over the water because of the dangerous front hole locations.
That's where McIlroy was at his best.
He hit 8-iron at the middle of the green on No. 5 with a draw that held up against the wind to 10 feet and made one of only 10 birdies on the day. On the 15th hole, the start of PGA National's famous finish, McIlroy hit 9-iron to just outside 5 feet, the closest anyone got in the third round.
There also was a bonus birdie on the par-4 11th. After making the long putt from the fringe, NBC Sports reporter Roger Maltbie walked by on the way to the 12th tee and said to him, "Really?"
McIlroy tried to contain a smile.
Despite his six birdies, his two key shots were for par. From the right rough on the 13th, the best he could manage was to hit into a front bunker, some 30 yards short of the flag. McIlroy nearly holed the shot to escape with par, and then he made an 8-footer for par on the next hole.
"They were two crucial holes today," he said.
English is showing that his win last summer on the Nationwide Tour was not an accident. He breezed through Q-school in December and has yet to miss a cut all year, though he has not finished better than a tie for 15th in the Waste Management Phoenix Open.
Even so, he is polished, humble and looks capable of winning, even against a player whom everyone is ready to crown as No. 1. English is among them, smiling when asked about playing a 22-year-old on the verge of going atop the world ranking.
"Rory is awesome," English said. "I haven't had a chance to meet him yet, but I've definitely watched him play the last couple of years. He's got a great game and he deserves [it]. I think he's the best player in the world right now, hands down, and I'm looking forward to tomorrow. He's very impressive."
Bradley had a 68 and was in the group at 7-under 203 with Brian Harman (69) and Justin Rose (71). Schwartzel wasted a good start with a double bogey on the 11th hole, but still had a 67 and was five shots behind.
Gillis is somewhat of a wild card. Behind that self-deprecating humor, developed from toiling in 26 countries in a hardscrabble career, is a guy who has been around too long to be intimidated by much, even someone of McIlroy's ability.
"I wish I could have got a couple out at the end to get a little closer to Rory," Gillis said. "He's not the type of guy you want to spot two shots to. But anything can happen on this golf course -- anything. So we'll just add them up tomorrow."

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FIVE SCOTS FINISH IN TOP 20 AT MOROCCO'S AMELKIS CLASSIC

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Colin@scottishgolfview.com
Joint overnight leader Gavin Dear from Murrayshall, Perth finished joint third in the EDP Tour event in Morocco today (Saturday).
Dear shot rounds of 69, 67 and 73 for a seven-under-par total of 209 to earn 1,750 Euros.
He finished two shots behind Damien Perrier (France) and Tiago Cruz (Portugal) who tied on 207, both players returning 69s in their final rounds. Perrier beat Cruz in a play-off for the 5,000 Euros first prize. Cruz collected 3,000 Euros.
In all, there were five Scots in the top 20, their best performance in the EPD Tour's Morocco Swing.
Rookie pros Davie Law from Aberdeen finished joint 11th with a closing round of 68 for four-under 212. He earned 646 Euros.
Peterhead's Philip McLean, also a rookie pro, finished a shot behind on 213 in 14th place with scores of 74, 70 and 69. He earned 640 Euros.
Ross Cameron (Ellon) and Paul O'Hara (Colville Park) shared 18th place on 216.Cameron finished with a 74, O'Hara with a 71. They each collected 449 Euros.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
207 Damien Perrier (Fra) 69 69 69, Tiago Cruz (Por) 70 68 69. Perrier won play-off.
209 Gavin Dear (Sco) 69 67 73, Max Kramer (Ger) 67 73 69.
Other Scots scores:
212 David Law 72 72 68 (T11).
213 Philip McLean 74 70 69 (14th).
216 Ross Cameron 72 70 74, Paul O'Hara 76 69 71 (T18).

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LEFT-HANDED LOAR LEADS NATIONWIDE TOUR EVENT IN PANAMA

FROM THE US NATIONWIDE TOUR WEBSITE
By Joe Chemycz, Nationwide Tour staff
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Lefty Edward Loar rolled in a six-foot birdie putt on his final hole Friday afternoon to take a one-stroke lead after 36 holes of the Panama Claro Championship. Loar finished the day with a 2-under 68 and stands 6-under after two trips around the Panama Golf Club.
Brian Smock rolled in three birdie putts of 30 feet during a round of 64 and shares second-place at 5-under 135 with Justin Bolli (70), who was paired with Loar for the first two days.
New Zealand's Tim Wilkinson (68) is in fourth place, two shots back of Loar and Texan Martin Piller (71) is three behind the leader.
"It's always nice (to be leading) because it means you're playing well," said Loar, who holds the lead for the first time in 40 career starts on the Nationwide Tour. "There is still a lot of golf left on a very challenging golf course."
Loar is finally getting to play in 2012. The former Oklahoma State standout earned his US PGA Tour card last fall but has gotten only four starts to date and made only one cut.
"I felt like I needed to get some more rounds in," said Loar, who will return to the US PGA Tour next week in Puerto Rico. "I did a little bit of everything today. I hit a lot of nice shots. I made some nice putts early but then had a couple goof-ups in the middle but closed with that birdie."
His biggest mistake came at the par-4, 14th hole where he made double-bogey despite having a wedge in his hand for his second shot.
"I caught a flier and it sailed over the green. I knew I was going to have a hard time making four but I never should have made six," he said. "It's pretty tough to control your distances out here. I'm not used to play for my wedges to run out. These greens are tough."
Bolli missed a 12-footer for birdie on the closing hole which could have given him a share of the lead. Instead, he's one back.
"The greens were getting really firm toward the end of the day," said Bolli. "I made some putts today but I just didn't putt as good as I did yesterday. I made a couple mistakes tee-to-green that cost me."
Bolli left a bunker shot in a bunker and made bogey at No. 6 and then hit a tee shot in a hazard on the next hole and made double. He still managed to hole enough putts to stay near the lead. He was at 6-under and leading when he three-putted the 17th to fall back into a tie with Loar.
Second-Round Notes
• Friday's weather: Mostly sunny and windy. High of 88. Winds N-NW 7-14 mph
• A total of 77 players made the 36-hole cut, which came at 4-over 144. In the tournament's inaugural year in 2004, the 36-hole leader was also at 6-under par and the cut came at 4-over par. Jimmy Walker went on to win that year with a 7-under 273 total.
• This the eighth time in nine years that that cut has been above par. In 2008, the cut was 5-over.
• This is the first time that Edward Loar has held/shared the lead after a round in 40 career starts on the Nationwide Tour. He has never led after a round in 14 starts on the US PGA Tour.
• Bogey-free rounds Thursday: 65 -- Justin Bolli, 66 -- Martin Piller; Friday: 68 -- Michael Sim (Aberdeen-born Australian). Sim made the cut on the limit mark, having had a 76 in the first round. He is T59.

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