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Woods shoots 68 as Singh
leads by 3
Tiger Woods and Davis Love
III made their moves on the course. Then they ducked out of the powerful wind
and watched just about everyone else move back to them on a wicked day at The
Masters.
When the third round was
suspended as darkness fell over Augusta National, Vijay Singh was standing tall
-- no small feat in gusts up to 42 mph.
With pine cones and limbs
strewn all over the course, Singh managed to forge ahead with two birdies when
the conditions were at their worst. He was at 7-under par with four holes to
finish and had a three-stroke lead over David Duval when they trudged off the
course. They'll return Sunday morning to finish the third round, then strap in
for what could be a thrilling, torturous conclusion to the 64th Masters.
"I've never seen a day
like this before," Jack Nicklaus said after his worst score in 155 rounds at
Augusta, an 81 that ended his faint dreams of a seventh green jacket. "This is
by far the toughest."
The leaders were forced
to play in wind that blew 30 mph, and gusted even stronger, with temperatures
that dropped below 50.
"It's the coldest I've
been in a long time, not even in the British Open," said Ernie Els, who was at
3-under. "We got a bad break playing when we did."
That wasn't the case for
Woods and Love, who have a chance to pull off the greatest comeback in Masters
history.
Despite a storm that stopped
play for two hours and interrupted his run of four straight birdies, Woods fired
back at the naysayers who thought he had no chance. He had a 4-under 68 and was
at 215, primed to pounce in the final round.
"A lot of people said I'm
out of it," Woods said with a broad smile. "I'm not out of it."
Neither is Love, who swears
he will not be shaken by Woods's presence on the leaderboard this time around.
He also had a 68 and was at 215.
"I came here to win," he
said. "So badly."
Joining them was Mike Weir
of Canada, who almost didn't make it to Augusta until his wife gave birth to
their first child on Tuesday. He had the best round of the early finishers, a
2-under 70 under a constant, howling wind.
"My round today feels like
a 65," Weir said. "I have as good a shot as anybody."
The largest 36-hole comeback
was eight strokes by Jack Burke Jr. in 1956. Woods and Love started the third
round nine strokes back, and made up ground quickly -- first on the course, then
in the clubhouse.
"The whole idea today was
to get to even par, and lucky if I got to under par," Woods said.
The wind, so strong it
caused a branch the size of a golf club to stick in the 18th fairway, took care
of the rest. Only eight players remained under par, and all of them will have
a chance in a final round expected to feature similar conditions.
Of course, that depends
on Singh.
"Vijay was the only one
who handled it," Els said.
Singh, the 1998 PGA Champion
who has never finished better than 10th in The Masters, was 2-under for his round.
"I deal with the weather
pretty good,'' said Singh, who is from Fiji in the South Pacific. "That was one
of the coldest rounds I've played in a long time."
Loren Roberts, a short
hitter taking advantage of course changes that put a premium on driving, finished
off a 1-under 71 and was the clubhouse leader at 213.
Duval, the 36-hole leader,
was hanging on for dear life.
He three-putted for bogey
on the third hole and missed a 2-footer for birdie on the seventh. Then, disaster
struck.
The wind shifted as his
ball was in flight on the par-3 12th, and it came down short onto the slope and
into the water for a double bogey.
"I hit the same club as
probably a lot of people," Duval said. "I just happened to catch a gust of wind
that was not favorable for me, so it's my back luck."
Duval fought back, with
a birdie on the par-5 13th and then a brilliant chip to inches for par on the
14th. He was at 4 under, in the fairway on the 15th when he marked his ball.
"I feel like I've played
14 holes, and two shots on 15, and didn't hit a bad shot yet," Duval said. "Under
the circumstances, I felt I played pretty well."
Duval wasn't the only one
who suffered.
Els, the two-time U.S.
Open champion, failed to make birdie on his 15 holes and was at 3 under. Phil
Mickelson made five bogeys on the front nine and had to make a hard par off the
pine straw on 15 to stay at 2 under.
Singh cruised along, seemingly
oblivious to the troubles of everyone else.
After missing the 11th
green to the left for bogey that dropped him into a share of the lead, Singh
made a 6-foot birdie on the 12th. He then hit the shot of the day, a wedge that
caught the slope and made a track for the hole, grazing the bottom of the cup.
Augusta National can have
a mind of its own, and it seemed to shine favorably on Woods amid the rain and
shifting winds.
The wind began to whip
not long after Woods signed his card, and there were indications that 215 would
be closer to the lead than he imagined.
"The flags were blowing
so loud, it sounded like someone shooting a gun out there," Love said.
Woods fired a pretty loud
shot of his own.
After saving a tough par
on No. 4, he got it going with four straight birdies starting on No. 7, no putt
longer than about 12 feet.
Then came the siren to
suspend play.
"I wish I could have kept
going," Woods said. "I had the rhythm of the round, the flow of my swing, a feeling
in my body.''
Still, he was right where
he wanted to be -- in the clubhouse, a score posted and his name on the leaderboard
for everyone to think about.
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