On a day when Jason Day survived greens that were almost unplayable at times to maintain his lead at the Players Championship in Florida, Briton Russell Knox on Saturday lamented a disastrous nine on the short 17th hole that sent him crashing out of contention.
Coming into the penultimate hole only five strokes adrift of Day, the Scot hit three balls into the water surrounding the island green before ending up with a six-over he described as an “epic fail.”
The nightmarish nine was compounded by a three-putt bogey at the closing hole and Knox ended with an eight-over 80 to drop into a tie for 40th, 13 shots behind Day at the end of the third round.
Photo: AFP
Knox’s tee shot on the 17th, which played 129 yards with the pin near the front-left, was short.
Instead of going to the drop area, the Scot shanked a second off the tee well right and his third attempt also came up short.
“It’s such an easy shot when you have no nerves or adrenaline,” the 30-year-old said. “A pro would never miss that. We should know what we’re doing, but it’s a different story once you’ve hit two in a row in the water. The green felt like it was the size of a quarter.”
After pitching from the drop zone to 38 feet behind the hole, the crowd gave Knox an ironic cheer and he raised his arms in mock celebration. He holed his second putt from seven feet.
“I ended up making an awesome putt for nine,” he said. “After I was walking through the tunnel [to 18], I was like, whoa, that was to avoid a 10.”
Only Bob Tway, who recorded a 12 in 2005, Robert Gamez (11, 1990) and Phil Blackmar (10, 1990), have scored higher on the 17th.
It was far from the only disaster on a day when only six of the field broke par.
World number one Day described the course as “nearly unplayable” after taking a pair of double-bogeys on the front nine of his third round before finishing with a one-over 73 and a four-stroke lead.
“This was the toughest day I’ve ever had to play in my life,” Day told reporters. “The greens got a little bit out of hand on the front side. Some of the pin locations were a little iffy with how quick the greens were.”
“I was very shocked... That’s all you could do, just try to survive. Talk about slow play. They make the course nearly unplayable,” he said.
The Australian finished the day with a 14-under total of 202, having earlier returned to complete the weather-delayed second round.
His second round 66 gave him a tournament record-low of 129 at the halfway mark.
Hideki Matsuyama of Japan started the third round with three straight birdies on his way to a 67 and a share of second place with German Alex Cejka (72) and American Ken Duke (65) at 10-under.
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