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Wiebe moves
two shots clear
Mark Wiebe seems
to be getting better with age. So does his bank account.
Wiebe, his
nerves intact after pulling a child out of the way of a golf cart,
shot a 6-under-par 66 today in the Tucson Open to put himself in
position for his first victory in nearly 15 years.
He won once
in 1985, his second year on the PGA Tour, and again in 1986. But
last season was Wiebe's most lucrative as he made 19 of 28 cuts
and earned $511,414. Now he stands to make $540,000 in one tournament
if he can put together another round like his last -- a seven-birdie,
one-bogey gem.
"The only record
I look at every year is the money list,'' Wiebe said about the time
since his last title. "It's not how; just get the job done. I told
them outside that I would love to play well tomorrow because I could
say I played well every day.''
His 54-hole
total of 14-under 202 was good for a two-shot lead over Garrett
Willis, who made a PGA Tour cut for the first time in four tries
on Saturday and then came back with a 64 -- the best score of the
tournament.
Wiebe will
play the final round with Willis, and introductions will be in order.
"There's guys
that can play that nobody in this room has heard of yet that will
someday pop up, and we'll say, 'Who is that?' " Wiebe said. "Somebody
said, 'You guys have a lot in common -- you really like the course.'
I said, 'Who is Garrett Willis?' "
Their scores
were not out of proportion as the area's customary winter sunshine
warmed the course after three days of cold. The tournament was pushed
back a day after snow and rain forced the suspension of play Friday.
Glen Hnatiuk
fired a 66 to get into a four-way tie for third with Kevin Sutherland,
Mark Hensby, and 1994 champion Andrew Magee.
So did Steve
Flesch, Harrison Frazar, and Brandt Jobe. They were five shots back
along with Bernhard Langer, Hunter Haas, Geoff Ogilvy, and Chris
Riley.
Fred Couples,
the biggest name in a field depleted by going head-to-head with
the Mercedes Championships in Hawaii, and 1996 U.S. Open champion
Steve Jones were part of a six-way cluster at 208.
Lee Porter
never found the groove that carried him to a two-stroke lead heading
into the third round, and shot 76. He will start the final round
at 210.
Wiebe had four
birdies by the turn.
Then came an
incident in which a young boy asked for his autograph while Wiebe
was sitting in the back of a cart. Somehow, the driver allowed the
vehicle to roll backward and Wiebe, the father of three, grabbed
the boy by the arm and lifted him onto his lap.
Shaken by the
child's crying, Wiebe wanted to ask his playing partners to go first
on the 10th tee, but knew it was against protocol because he had
just birdied.
But he regained
his composure, birdied No. 10 after lobbing a wedge within 6 feet,
and made birdie on two of the next three holes to reach 15 under.
Wiebe gave
back a stroke when he three-putted from 12 feet for a bogey on the
14th hole, but parred out with the help of a chip at No. 17 that
rolled to a stop 2 feet from the pin.
Willis, who
could use a big payday even more, lived a rookie's dream by leading
most of the round. But he had too much ground to make up after starting
at 4-under.
"I try not
to look, but even playing the Buy.com Tour, I've been the same way,''
he said. "I'm a leaderboard watcher. I just need to go out and do
my business, not watch. At the same time I'm still in awe. I look
up there and see some of the names that I've watched on TV for years.''
He was nearly
perfect with his irons, leaving himself no more than 8 feet on six
of his eight birdies, and said a 20-minute frost delay helped.
"That was a
big difference,'' Willis said. "Going out there and teeing off in
decent weather allows the bones and body to get a little loose.''
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