Koepka Pulls Away Four Clear Of The Field, Rahm Still Second At Masters
Brooks Koepka added one more birdie to his total to get to 13-under, even as his closest rival, Jon Rahm, slipped from 10-under to nine-under and the lead had swelled to four shots at the 87th Masters.
Brooks Koepka added one more birdie to his total to get to 13-under, even as his closest rival, Jon Rahm, slipped from 10-under to nine-under and the lead had swelled to four shots at the 87th Masters.
The play was suspended just as the lead trio approached the seventh green, which itself had a lot of water. That means the lead group, Koepka, Rahm and amateur Sam Bennett will need to play almost 30 holes on Sunday.
Augusta National officials announced that play will resume on Sunday at 8.30 am and the final round with players starting from first and tenth is expected to begin at 12.30 pm.
By the time play was called off, Koepka with a customary birdie on the Par-5 second -- his seventh on a Par-5 apart from one eagle -- had moved to 13-under, while Rahm, who started the third round at 10-under, picked a shot on Par-5 second but gave away back-to-back bogeys on fourth and fifth.
That gave Koepka, who has dropped just one bogey in 42 holes, a hefty four-shot lead.
As the conditions became wet, soggy and slippery with flooding at various parts of the course including greens like the seventh and 12th, only 11 of the 54 players left after two rounds, had gained some ground. Of them only four -- Patrick Cantlay, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Sungjae Im and Scottie Scheffler -- had gained two or more shots in the holes they managed in the third round.
At one stage after his birdie on the 15th of the second round Rahm, then at 11-under, had closed the gap with Koepka (12-under) to just one, but by the sixth hole of the third round, the gap had swelled to four.
Rahm dropped a closing bogey to finish the second round two shots behind. Then in the third Koepka birdied the Par-5 second hole and Rahm had one birdie and two bogeys.
Earlier Tiger Woods just about squeezed inside the cut-line, but that was also because Justin Thomas dropped a bogey on the last and exited like Rory McIlroy.
It was Woods' record-equalling 23rd straight cut at the Masters and he has never missed the cut at Augusta, since he turned pro and won his first Green Jacket in 1997. Injuries did force him to miss the Masters on four occasions in 2014, 2015, 2017 and 2021. Woods joined Gary Player and Fred Couples in a streak of 23 straight cuts.
Woods teed off from the 10th for the third round and had a miserable time in the third round. Drenched by the downpour, he bogeyed 10th, and 13th and then had rare back-to-back double bogeys on 15th and 16th to be 6-over through seven holes.
Dustin Johnson, too, suffered in the third round. His first nine on the back stretch saw him make just one par and he had five bogeys, one double and two birdies. He had four pars in four holes on his second nine when play was stopped.
Amateur Sam Bennett dropped two shots with bogeys on first and second but was still lying third at 6-under.
Six players including three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson, who had a 69 in the second round, Justin Rose, Joaquin Niemann and Russell Henley were even for nine holes and tied eighth alongside Cameron Young and Jason Day, who were 1-over through eight and nine holes for totals of 4-under.
Scottie Scheffler, 2-under through 12 holes, was tied 14th with Ryan Fox and Gary Woodland.
On the face of it, it might seem Koepka and Rahm may make it a two-horse race, but at the Augusta National, one bad swing can change it all. Also Koepka, currently on the seventh, will have a testing time as he will need to walk for a shade more than 29 holes with a knee that has caused him much anguish in the recent past and cost him time and confidence, which he is just about regaining.
The forecast for Sunday looks much better and should be much drier and a bit warmer so a full day's play can take place to crown a new champion.
On the face of it, it might seem Koepka and Rahm may make it a two-horse race, but at the Augusta National, one bad swing can change it all. Also Koepka, currently on the seventh, will have a testing time as he will need to walk for a shade more than 29 holes with a knee that has caused him much anguish in the recent past and cost him time and confidence, which he is just about regaining.
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