CHARL SCHWARTZEL FIVE AHEAD WITH A ROUND TO GO IN THAILAND
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE ASIAN TOUR
Chonburi,
Thailand: An irrepressible Charl Schwartzel of South Africa
pulled five shots clear of the pack after a master class four-under-par
68 in the third round of the US$1 million Thailand Golf Championship today.
Schwartzel,
searching for his first title in 20 months after winning the 2011
Masters Tournament, dropped his first bogey of the week at Amata Spring
Country Club but a fantastic eagle and three other birdies saw him
increase his overnight four-shot advantage.
Sweden’s
Daniel Chopra overcame a double bogey as he battled to a 69 to trail a
distant second in the Asian Tour’s showpiece while local hope Thitiphun
Chuayprakong scrambled to a 71 for third place, six back.
Two
closing birdies in front of large galleries pushed Ryder Cup star
Sergio Garcia into fourth position following a 68 but he faces an uphill
task being eight shots back of the runaway leader.
The
28-year-old Schwartzel, who opened his campaign with successive 65s and
leads on 18-under-par 198, is poised to improve on last year’s
runner-up finish to Lee Westwood but he is not prepared to pop the
champagne yet.
“It’s
a game of patience and I just have to go out there to play. If it’s my
time, it’s my time,” said Schwartzel, who is seeking his ninth
professional victory and his first on the Asian Tour.
“Today
felt good. The majority of it was solid. I hit a few bad ones but it
was because I was sweating so much. I gave myself a lot of chances
especially coming in. 15, 16, 17, 18 … I gave myself chances, could have
easily been four birdies. Hit good shots, good putts but it wasn’t
meant to be.”
Schwartzel,
who is hoping to emulate Westwood’s wire-to-wire victory last year,
dropped his first bogey in three rounds after finding the fairway trap
on the demanding ninth hole but he quickly reasserted his dominance with
a terrific eagle, firing a five iron into the 12th hole and sinking the 12-foot putt. He then rolled in a 10-foot curler on 14
“It’s
unpredictable. I’ve shot two 65s and there is a low score out there. I
prefer not to think about it (a winning score). I’m just going to keep
playing and see if I can keep shooting a few under par tomorrow,” he
said.
“I’m
playing well. It’s been a good few weeks as I’m pretty much in control
of my golf swing. I can’t ask for more than that,” added the South
African, who has finished fifth, third and second in his last three
tournaments.
Chopra
stayed close to the leader with birdies on one and six but dropped a
costly double bogey on the par five seventh hole. He finished strongly
with three birdies in his remaining 10 holes.
“I
hit a good shot but it clipped the edge of the lip and I made double
there (seven). After that I played quite steadily and hung in there
nicely. Obviously my goal is to go out and try to make it uncomfortable
for Charl. Nobody wants to see him run away with it. I want to do my
absolute best to make it close down the stretch,” said the Swede, who is
a two-time winner on the PGA Tour.
Thitiphun,
an emerging name in Thai golf, was disappointed he could not finish
closer to Schwartzel after a roller-coaster round that included five
birdies and four bogeys. “I made mistakes but these are all part of the game. I’ve been working
with my psychologist and I now know there are days when you don’t
perform at the level whichu want too. I’ve learned to accept that,”
said the 20-year-old.
“I
played perfect golf in the last two days but I’m still happy with the
position I’m in. I think a top five finish will be great. Charl played
very good but there are so many good players behind him who can shoot a
low number. I think the champion will only be decided in the last three
holes.”
Garcia
reckons Schwartzel will be a hard man to beat.
“He played great last
year and doing great again. He obviously likes the course. I like the
course too but there are a couple of holes which I feel a little bit
uncomfortable,” said the Spaniard.
After
arriving in Bangkok early Thursday morning for the first round. having
just completed the Japan Tour Qualifying School, big-hitting Hend, a
two-time Asian Tour winner, has moved up the leaderboard nicely with a
69.
“I’m
just getting myself into it. Just doing what I can,” he said. “Charl is
playing so well but if you throw something at him and he makes a
mistake, there is a possibility. That’s all you can do. It’s hard to put
pressure on the guy who is eight or nine in front of you. Any pressure
that we can put on is the pressure that he puts on himself.”
Defending
champion Westwood and reigning Masters champion shot Bubba Watson 70 and 71
respectively for tied seventh place on 209 while current Asian Tour
Order of Merit leader Thaworn Wiratchant also carded a 70 for tied
seventh position.
THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72). Yardage 7,453
198 Charl SCHWARTZEL (RSA) 65-65-68.
203 Daniel CHOPRA (SWE) 67-67-69.
204 Thitiphun CHUAYPRAKONG (THA) 66-67-71.
206 Sergio GARCIA (ESP) 69-69-68.
207 Scott HEND (AUS) 70-68-69.
208 Masanori KOBAYASHI (JPN) 68-67-73.
209 PARK Hyun-bin (KOR) 68-74-67, Nicolas COLSAERTS (BEL) 72-67-70, Jbe
KRUGER (RSA) 69-70-70, Anirban LAHIRI (IND) 70-69-70, Thaworn WIRATCHANT
(THA) 69-70-70, Lee WESTWOOD (ENG) 70-69-70, Bubba WATSON (USA)
68-70-71, Ryo ISHIKAWA (JPN) 70-66-73.
210 Chapchai NIRAT (THA) 70-73-67, Simon DYSON (ENG) 72-71-67, Hunter MAHAN (USA) 71-69-70.
Labels: ASIAN TOUR
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home