| Tway
regains lead Two
years of rain-delayed runaways by Tiger Woods are over, not to mention his quest
for a fourth straight victory in the Memorial Tournament. The
stage now shifts to Bob Tway, the 43-year-old Oklahoman and former PGA champion
who walked the line between aggressive shots and disastrous results and positioned
himself for his first victory in seven years. ``It
would be a big boost for my confidence,'' Tway said. Playing
bogey-free while other contenders succumbed to mistakes on the back nine Saturday
at Muirfield Village Golf Club, Tway had a 4-under 68 to emerge from the pack
and take a one-stroke lead over Stewart Cink into the final round. Five
players had a share of the lead at one point until Tway birdied No. 17 from 15
feet to finish at 12-under 204, the first time he has had at least a share of
the 54-hole lead since the Disney Classic three years ago. Cink
could have joined him, but missed a 3-foot par putt on the final hole, which he
attributed to a gust of wind that hit him as he was taking the putter back. ``I've
got a lot of surface area here for the wind to hit,'' said the 6-foot-4 Cink.
Justin Leonard,
the 36-hole leader, was around the top of the board all afternoon until two bogeys
on the back nine dropped him back to 206 and an even-par 72. ``The
thing I have to remember is I'm still in the golf tournament,'' Leonard said.
Vijay Singh also
was tied at one point and only two strokes back until he drove into a creek on
the final hole and took double bogey. He shot a 72 and was four strokes behind.
``On this golf
course, it's a fine line between good and bad,'' Tway said. ``I didn't make a
bogey, so that's good. If I do that tomorrow, I'll feel good about it.'' Tway
has won only two times since he captured the Memorial in 1989, so long ago that
Woods was only 14, still in junior high school. Not
much has changed. Tway is closing in on a victory at Muirfield, and Woods again
is nowhere to be found. Trying
to become the first player in 75 years to win the same event four straight years,
Woods had to settle for an even-par 72 -- 16 pars, one bogey and his only birdie
coming on a tee shot at the par-3 eighth hole that ricocheted off a tree and onto
the green. He finished at 216, a dozen strokes out of the lead in a tie for 56th.
``I tried as
hard as I possibly could this week,'' he said. ``It just didn't come together.''
Another streak
is in jeopardy for Woods. He has finished in the top 30 in the last 59 stroke-play
events on the PGA Tour, dating to his tie for 56th in the Bay Hill Invitational
three years ago. Not
many would have guessed at the beginning of the week that Woods, the three-time
defending champion at the Memorial, would be under par for only nine of the first
54 holes played at Muirfield Village, or that he would be so far back in the pack.
The biggest surprise
was that he was tied with 62-year-old Jack Nicklaus. Nicklaus,
playing on the PGA Tour for the first time since last year's Memorial, played
a solid round of 1-under 71, finishing with a birdie on the 18th hole for a cheer
that could be heard four holes away. ``The
course is going to play fairly easy,'' Nicklaus said. ``It has to be if I shot
71.'' It wasn't
that way for some guys who are more than half his age. Sergio Garcia made a quadruple-bogey
9 on No. 5 and wound up with a 77. The
real hard-luck story was Harrison Frazar -- again. Two
years ago, he was one stroke out of the lead going into the third round and shot
a 78 while paired with Woods, a round that haunted him the rest of the season.
This time, he
was one behind former Texas roommate Justin Leonard, and the results were only
slightly better. Frazar was tied for the lead until making three straight bogeys,
and he wound up with a 75. While
the last two Memorials have been runaways in the rain -- Woods won by seven and
five strokes -- this year is nicely positioned for a shootout in the sunshine.
Rain soaked Muirfield
early and allowed for some great scores. John Cook, who lived at Muirfield while
playing at Ohio State, had a 65 and was at 207, tied with Shigeki Maruyama (67)
and Skip Kendall (68). Twelve
players were within five shots of the lead, including Phil Mickelson at 209. Tway
hasn't played in the final group since he was tied with Woods at the 1999 Disney
Classic. Tway closed with a 76 and finished three behind Woods. This
was only the fifth time in his career that he has had at least a share of the
54-hole lead, although he is loaded with confidence. He has made only three bogeys
all week on a Muirfield course that comes with a stiff penalty for errant shots.
He also took
notice of last week, when 45-year-old Nick Price won at Colonial. Tway
is 43 and was asked to join the proposed Major Champions Tour. He declined, not
willing to give up his PGA Tour membership. ``I
feel like I could still win out here,'' he said. Email
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