AUGUSTA, Georgia (AP) ― Peter Hanson could hear the roars that signalled a Phil Mickelson charge at the Masters on Saturday, and the Swede calmly responded with a series of birdies that gave him a one-shot lead over the American heading into the final round.
While the crowd urged on Mickelson, the 34-year-old Hanson, playing in only his second Masters, made four birdies over the last five holes for a 7-under 65, the lowest score of the tournament.
“I’m standing in the middle of the fairway and I feel him breathing down my neck a little bit,” Hanson said.
The advantage going into Sunday belongs to Mickelson, a three-time Masters champion who thrilled the sun-baked crowd with some magical shots. Mickelson shot 30 on the back nine, including a birdie on the par-5 15th when he played a full flop shot with a 64-degree wedge ― no one even thinks about hitting a shot like that ― to 4 feet.
He wound up with a 66 and was in the final group at the Masters for the fourth time in nine years. Mickelson won the last three times he was in that spot, and on Sunday he faces a Swede whom he trounced in the Ryder Cup two years ago in Wales.
“I love it here, and I love nothing more than being in the last group on Sunday at the Masters,” Mickelson said. “It’s the great thing in professional golf.”
Hanson, who has never been closer than seven shots going into the lead at any major, was at 9-under 207.
Mickelson gave the leaderboard some star power when so many others faded or, in the case of Tiger Woods, never came close to getting there. Woods now has gone 26 consecutive holes on the back nine at Augusta without a birdie. He had to settle for a 72 and was 12 shots behind, his largest 54-hole deficit ever at the Masters.
But he wasn’t alone.
U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy, who started the day one shot off the lead, made double bogey from the trees on the first hole and it only got worse from there. He had three 6s on his card and went out in 42, finishing with a 77 that left him 10 shots behind. He played with Sergio Garcia, who shot 75. Neither made a birdie until No. 12, and they hugged each other on the green to celebrate.
Fred Couples, at 52 the oldest player atop the leaderboard going into the weekend at Augusta, bogeyed his first two holes and tried to stay in the game. He wound up with a 75 and was seven shots behind.
A win would give Mickelson his fourth green jacket, same as Woods and Arnold Palmer.
But this is far from a two-man race.
Former British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen rode his sweet swing to a 69 and was only two shots behind. Bubba Watson birdied the last hole for a 70 and was three shots back, followed by Matt Kuchar, who joined Mickelson as the first players in 13 years to birdie the 18th hole each of the first three rounds.
The group at 4-under 212 included Lee Westwood (72) and Padraig Harrington, who shot 68 and summed up what awaits on Sunday.
“It’s not the player that plays the most consistent that wins at the Masters. The player who plays probably some of the most exciting golf wins at the Masters,” Harrington said. “You only have to look at the way Phil has won some of his majors. You’ve got to take on golf shots. Fortune favors the brave at times here.”
While the crowd urged on Mickelson, the 34-year-old Hanson, playing in only his second Masters, made four birdies over the last five holes for a 7-under 65, the lowest score of the tournament.
“I’m standing in the middle of the fairway and I feel him breathing down my neck a little bit,” Hanson said.
The advantage going into Sunday belongs to Mickelson, a three-time Masters champion who thrilled the sun-baked crowd with some magical shots. Mickelson shot 30 on the back nine, including a birdie on the par-5 15th when he played a full flop shot with a 64-degree wedge ― no one even thinks about hitting a shot like that ― to 4 feet.
He wound up with a 66 and was in the final group at the Masters for the fourth time in nine years. Mickelson won the last three times he was in that spot, and on Sunday he faces a Swede whom he trounced in the Ryder Cup two years ago in Wales.
“I love it here, and I love nothing more than being in the last group on Sunday at the Masters,” Mickelson said. “It’s the great thing in professional golf.”
Hanson, who has never been closer than seven shots going into the lead at any major, was at 9-under 207.
Mickelson gave the leaderboard some star power when so many others faded or, in the case of Tiger Woods, never came close to getting there. Woods now has gone 26 consecutive holes on the back nine at Augusta without a birdie. He had to settle for a 72 and was 12 shots behind, his largest 54-hole deficit ever at the Masters.
But he wasn’t alone.
U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy, who started the day one shot off the lead, made double bogey from the trees on the first hole and it only got worse from there. He had three 6s on his card and went out in 42, finishing with a 77 that left him 10 shots behind. He played with Sergio Garcia, who shot 75. Neither made a birdie until No. 12, and they hugged each other on the green to celebrate.
Fred Couples, at 52 the oldest player atop the leaderboard going into the weekend at Augusta, bogeyed his first two holes and tried to stay in the game. He wound up with a 75 and was seven shots behind.
A win would give Mickelson his fourth green jacket, same as Woods and Arnold Palmer.
But this is far from a two-man race.
Former British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen rode his sweet swing to a 69 and was only two shots behind. Bubba Watson birdied the last hole for a 70 and was three shots back, followed by Matt Kuchar, who joined Mickelson as the first players in 13 years to birdie the 18th hole each of the first three rounds.
The group at 4-under 212 included Lee Westwood (72) and Padraig Harrington, who shot 68 and summed up what awaits on Sunday.
“It’s not the player that plays the most consistent that wins at the Masters. The player who plays probably some of the most exciting golf wins at the Masters,” Harrington said. “You only have to look at the way Phil has won some of his majors. You’ve got to take on golf shots. Fortune favors the brave at times here.”
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Articles by Korea Herald