Australia’s Jason Day shot a sparkling five-under 66 to soar to the lead of the US$8 million World Cup of Golf after the third round yesterday, as defending champion Matt Kuchar charged into contention.
Day, grieving the loss of eight relatives killed in the Philippines by Typhoon Haiyan, rolled in six birdies to hold a one-stroke lead over Danish overnight leader Thomas Bjorn on a sunny, breezy day at Royal Melbourne.
Day’s composure on the sandbelt course’s slick greens not only put him into contention for individual honors, but also put Australia a stroke ahead of the US in the team component.
Photo: AFP
“Very excited,” the world No. 18, who sits on a nine-under total of 204, told reporters. “I’ve just go out there and stay patient.”
Sixty players are competing for individual honors for the first time at the biennial World Cup, which was previously solely a team tournament.
Twenty-six two-man teams also competing, with the best aggregate scores after four rounds of strokeplay determining the winning nation.
After two days of patient, solid golf, Danish veteran Bjorn found the going tougher, but managed to graft to an even-par 71 to lie outright second, with world No. 7 Kuchar a further two strokes adrift.
Kuchar, who won the last World Cup in 2011 with compatriot Gary Woodland when it was solely a team event, shot a bogey-free 68 to move into outright third.
The rangy 35-year-old’s unflinching control made up for a difficult day for compatriot Kevin Streelman, who drifted down the leaderboard to four-under after carding a three-over 74.
The famed sandbelt course has frustrated much of the field throughout the tournament, but Welshman Stuart Manley, one of eight players competing in the individual tournament alone, endured the ultimate emotional rollercoaster yesterday.
After opening his round with successive birdies, the 34-year-old aced the 161m par-three third to soar into second place and mistakenly believed he had won a Mercedes car offered as a prize for holes-in-one scored today.
After patting the display car and exchanging ‘high-fives’ with anyone within reach, Manley promptly imploded on the following par-four with a septuple-bogey 11 to crash from a total of seven-under back to even-par.
However, he bounced back to finish with a creditable 72 for the day, seven strokes from the leaders.
“Probably the highest of highs and the lowest of lows,” he said. “The Aussie fans are pretty brutal.”
Former major winner Graham McDowell, playing for Ireland, shot a 68 to remain an outside chance to take individual honors, six strokes behind.
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