Trevor Immelman held firm for pole position to win the Masters with a third round of 69 on Saturday that gave him a two-stroke lead and set a daunting target for hard-chasing Tiger Woods.
The 28-year-old South African started the day as tournament leader and after a wobble or two was still there at the end of the day with a 11-under-par total of 205.
That left him two strokes clear of last year’s US PGA Rookie of the Year Brandt Snedeker who had a 70, with 40-year-old US journeyman Steve Flesch, who carded a 69, a further stroke back.
English Ryder Cup star Paul Casey was alone in fourth at seven under after a 69.
“All I can do is go out tomorrow and play as hard as I can and just believe in myself,” Immelman said.
His stellar form has made it all the tougher for Woods to keep his Grand Slam hopes on track despite a battling four-under-par from the world No.1.
It was the American’s best round at Augusta since a 65 in the third round of the 2005 tournament, but it still left him a daunting six strokes off the pace.
In his favor, though, none of the four players ahead of him have won a major before.
It was a minor miracle that Immelman was even playing in the Masters having undergone a major operation just 14 weeks ago to remove a golf-ball sized benign tumour from his diaphragm.
But Augusta has brought out the best in him before, and so it proved to be the case again with back-to-back 68s giving him the halfway lead.
The Florida resident dropped briefly out of the lead after bogeying the fourth, but he recovered that on the eighth, and back-to-back birdies at 13 and 14 put him into a three-stroke lead at 10-under.
He had a stroke of luck to save par on the 15th when his ball defied gravity to hold up on the steep bank of the green after his third shot. And he birdied the last when he hit a wonderful approach to two feet to build a handy cushion.
“I started playing great golf around the turn and to get away with a par on 11 was great for me and then I got the birdies,” he said. “I was just begging for that ball to stop on the 15th, and I couldn’t quite believe it when it stayed up.”
Woods, seeking a fifth Green Jacket in 12 years, a 14th major title and the first leg of the fabled Grand Slam of golf, knew that he had to claw some ground back on the leaders after two lackluster rounds.
A tap-in birdie at the par-five second was followed by a frustrating run of seven straight pars, but he produced an inspired back nine with birdies at the 10th, 13th and 17th where he was an inch short of an eagle-two.
“I put myself right back in the tournament, I’m right there,” was his assessment of his position.
“Today 68 was the highest score I could have made, I hit so many good shots that skirted the hole. It was not very far [from a 66 or 65], not very far at all,” Woods said.
Marta Kostyuk’s maiden WTA 1000 title in Madrid came on Saturday thanks to her power, poise and a pair of unexpected lucky shorts. The world No. 23 beat eighth-ranked Mirra Andreeva 6-3, 7-5 in under 90 minutes to secure the most prestigious trophy of her career, her third professional singles title and second in less than a month after Rouen. Yet as the 23-year-old Ukrainian posed for photographs at the Caja Magica, it was not just the silverware that caught the eye. Held alongside her team and her two dogs, Kostyuk showed off a piece of black men’s underwear, prompting
Throwing more than US$5 billion at a divisive new tour and walking away after five seasons does not look like good business, but LIV Golf was not all bad news for Saudi Arabia. Oil-funded LIV, which poached top stars and sent golf’s establishment into a tailspin, helped push the conservative kingdom into global view — one of its key aims, experts said. The exit, confirmed on Thursday after weeks of speculation, does not signal a flight of Saudi money from sport, even after the Middle East war that sparked Iranian attacks around the Gulf, they said. “Saudi Arabia is not
Arsenal stormed six points clear at the top of the English Premier League as Bukayo Saka and Viktor Gyokeres put Fulham to the sword in a 3-0 win, while West Ham United’s defeat at Brentford offered Tottenham Hotspur a lifeline in the battle for survival. The Gunners have stumbled toward the finish line in their quest for a first league title in 22 years, blowing a sizeable lead over Manchester City in a series of nervous displays. However, the return of Saka, making his first start in six weeks, freed up Mikel Arteta’s men in a dominant performance that shrugged
China’s Wu Yize on Monday won the World Snooker Championship for the first time with a dramatic 18-17 victory over Shaun Murphy in the final. Wu held his nerve to seal his thrilling triumph in a tense last frame shoot-out at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre. The 22-year-old is the second Chinese player to win the world title after Zhao Xintong beat Mark Williams to make history as the first Asian to lift the trophy last year. Wu is also the second-youngest player to be crowned world champion at the Crucible after Stephen Hendry, who was 21 when he won in 1990. “I have been trying