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Woods shoots 65 to lead
by 6
On the table next to Tiger
Woods's chair today was a bottle of water, not a trophy, a reminder that there's
still one round left to play in the Memorial Tournament.
Try getting everyone else
to believe that.
Harrison Frazar, who trailed
Woods by one stroke when the third round began on soft, soggy Muirfield Village,
finished the day 14 strokes behind and became the latest member of the Tiger
Woods Fan Club.
"It's been a long time
since I've played with him, and now I know why," Frazar said.
Ernie Els thought he had
seen it all. He has had four sensational battles with Woods since 1998, but could
only watch as Woods manhandled Muirfield Village for a 7-under-par 65 to build
the largest 54-hole lead on the PGA Tour in two years.
"He's just awesome, man,"
Els said.
Woods will be paired Sunday
with Steve Lowery, who birdied the 18th for a 66 that left him six strokes behind.
Let's see. Lowery, whose
only PGA Tour victory came six years ago, will spot the No. 1 player in the world
six strokes on the course built by Jack Nicklaus but now seemingly owned by Woods.
"I'd have to bet on Tiger,"
Lowery said.
Safe bet.
Of course, anything is
possible. Woods could get the kind of migraine that made Mike Weir feel as though
the Ohio State marching band was playing "Hang On, Sloopy" inside his head. He
could miss his tee time. He could slip the non-conforming Callaway ERC driver
in his bag and get disqualified. He could retire.
Then again, just last week
in Germany, Woods had a two-stroke lead going into the final round and finished
tied for third, the first time since 1996 he had let a 54-hole lead get away.
"Oh, come on guys," Els
said. "Don't even try. It's over."
Woods made his first bogey
in 48 holes on No. 18, but still was at 17-under 199 and has plenty room for
error as he tries to become the first repeat champion in the 25-year history
of the Memorial.
The six-stroke lead is
the largest on tour for 54 holes since David Duval led by seven in Tucson in
1998, and its the most for Woods since he took a nine-stroke lead into the final
round of the 1997 Masters and won by 12.
Woods, however, was not
ready to polish off his victory speech.
"If it were over, there
would be a trophy," he said.
Still, he was looking ahead
to a chance to make his first successful title defense since he turned pro.
"It would be nice to get
that over with, and then I don't have to hear anymore questions about it," he
said.
Justin Leonard, made an
ace on No. 8 and had a 66. It was as good as Leonard has felt about his results
all year, and the fact he was seven strokes behind was not about to spoil his
mood.
The same can't be said
for Harrison Frazar, who started the third round just one stroke behind Woods,
and Els, trying to win for the first time in over a year.
By the time they walked
off the seventh green, Woods had a 10-stroke advantage over Els and was six ahead
of Frazar. Both got caught up watching an awesome display of golf that featured
a six-hole stretch in which Woods was 6-under.
"He hit shots today that
I don't know if any other human can hit," said Frazar, who had a 43 on the back
nine and wound up with a 78.
Woods, who said he "got
around" for a 63 on Friday, actually hit the ball much more crisply today, when
players could lift, clean and place their ball in the fairway because of overnight
rains and a light drizzle late in the round.
For a while, there were
whispers of a 59 in the gallery, and for good reason.
After a couple of short
birdie putts on Nos. 3 and 4, Woods narrowly missed a 40-foot eagle putt, then
hit a shot that left Frazar shaking his head. From a slightly downhill lie, 238
yards to carry a bunker on the par-5 seventh, Woods hit a 3-iron that grazed
the cup and stopped 20 feet away.
"A heel-pull," Woods said.
He was trying to hit the
middle of the green, but instead the ball swung left toward the flag. Oh, well.
He then hit 7-iron to 10
inches on the par-3 eighth for a tap-in birdie, reducing Els and Frazar to the
role of bystanders.
"It's not that he was 6-under
over six holes," Frazar said. "It was how he was doing it."
Woods said the thought
of a 59 never entered his head. He just wanted to birdie the next hole, and gave
himself a chance at that. Still, when his 10-foot birdie putt on No. 9 just turned
off at the left, Woods swung his putter and winced.
Similarly, he fells to
his knees when an 18-footer for eagle on No. 11 and a 20-footer for birdie on
No. 12 curled over the lip.
"I hit the ball much better
than I did yesterday," Woods said. "I just didn't make as many putts." His rounds
of 63-65 broke by three strokes the Memorial record for best score in consecutive
rounds.
Weir had a 68 and was at
207, while the group at 209 included Els (72), Masters champion Vijay Singh (68),
and Hal Sutton (67).
By the time Sutton finished
his round, someone in the gallery shouted, "Nice round." Sutton looked over his
shoulder at the leaderboard and shook his head.
"Yeah," he said. "But we're
getting farther behind."
Nicklaus, the tournament
founder, had a 72 and was at 220, while 31-year-old son Gary struggled on an
easy day for scoring, posting a 2-over 74 that left him at 214.
Woods, meanwhile, putted
for eagle on three of the par 5s and said he would attack on Sunday whenever
he had a chance. He needs only a 68 to break the Memorial scoring record of 268
set by Tom Lehman in 1994.
Amazing?
"The amazement has gone
away," Leonard said of Woods.
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