Carter, a somewhat reluctant leader,
and Waldorf tied at top Jim
Carter, still a little squeamish in the spotlight of the PGA Tour, says he will
be seeking to call as much attention to himself as possible in the final round
of the Buick Classic.
"My
main focus is just going to be on me," he said Saturday after a 5-under 66 left
him tied with Duffy Waldorf for the third-round lead at 8-under 205. "I am going
to be real selfish tomorrow. Me. Me. Me."
Thinking
of himself first has never come easy for the soft-spoken Carter. On Thursday,
he said he didn't even remember it was his 38th birthday until a PGA official,
his old college coach, reminded him.
And
Carter says his comfort zone has not extended to the two other times he led after
three rounds -- the 1989 Hawaiian Open and the 1995 Anheuser-Busch Classic. He
didn't win either tournament.
"Basically,
I've been kind of a quiet guy," he said. ``I am not that outgoing in the public
eye. So it is different to be out there in front of everybody trying to perform.
... But I am feeling more comfortable and learning to have a little more fun with
the gallery."
Winning a tour
event is only a matter of time, said Carter, whose best finish in nine years on
tour was a third.
"I am playing
great golf," he said. ``I am getting better all the time. I am doing the things
I want to do. And I believe it is going to happen."
Waldorf
has rarely been accused of being uncomfortable with attention. From his psychedelic
caps to graffiti-covered balls to unusual name, he has always seemed to stand
out. He has won only once on tour, the 1995 Texas Open.
Now
36, Waldorf, who had a 68 Saturday, said he feels the urgency to win again.
"It would mean that I've still got
enough game to compete out here," he said. "You see the young guys coming on and
they are hitting it longer than you and making more putts and chipping great.
You go, `Geez, I am getting old. I am not hitting it longer. I am struggling with
my putting.' You wonder if you are ever going to get back."
Fives
others -- Lee Janzen, Steve Flesch, David Sutherland, Justin Leonard and Chris
Perry -- were two strokes behind the leaders as no golfer could put any real distance
between themselves and the rest of the field. Heading into Sunday's final round,
16 players were within four strokes of the leaders.
The
field was bunched in large part because hot, breezy weather made Westchester Country
Club's small, undulating greens harder and browner as the leaders played their
rounds Saturday afternoon. Balls which were staying on the putting surfaces the
first two days squirted time and again into the rough behind or off to the side
of the greens Saturday.
Carter,
the 1983 NCAA champion at Arizona State, had five birdies in a round that got
a spark from the very beginning with birdies on Nos. 1 and 2. He also made birdies
at Nos. 9, 10 and 18.
Waldorf
had a more erratic round with three bogeys, four birdies and an eagle. The eagle
came on the par-5 fifth hole when he drilled a 2-iron from 245 yards within 5
feet of the cup and made the putt. He also made birdie putts of 20 feet on 13,
25 feet on 14, chipped in from 30 feet on 17 and tapped in for a birdie on the
par-5 18th after hitting driver-driver to the side of the green and putting within
2 feet with a 3-wood.
Waldorf
said he used golf balls scribbled with New York themes Saturday, including the
Statue of Liberty and the New York Knicks logo. In fact, he made eagle with the
Knicks ball, Waldorf said.
Janzen,
the Buick Classic winner in 1994 in a duel with Ernie Els, shot a 2-under 69 despite
taking 32 putts. Leonard is playing his first tournament ever here and said Saturday
he was only starting to learn where and where not to land the ball on the tricky
greens. He had a 66 Saturday.
Flesch,
one of the few left-handers on the PGA Tour, had five birdies in a 66. He said
he has played well this week because he has driven the ball accurately, hitting
37 of 42 fairways.
Sutherland
had three birdies and did not make a bogey in shooting a 68. Perry finished with
birdies at 17 and 18 to shoot an even-par 71.
Jeff
Maggert, the second-round leader with Perry at 6 under, held a piece of the lead
at 7 under midway through the round Saturday but played himself out of contention
with bogey 5s on Nos. 11, 12, 13, 15, 16 and a double-bogey on 18.
His
6-over 77 dropped him from a tie for first at the start of the round to a tie
for 38th.
Tom Byrum also
shared the lead at 7 under with Maggert and Carter on the back nine Saturday before
bogeys at 15 and 16 dropped him back in the pack. Byrum shot a 70 and was among
four golfers at 5-under 208.
Divots:
Corey Pavin, who just made the cut at 3 over, had seven birdies and one bogey
en route to a 65. It was the best round of the day. He was at 3-under 210. ...
Another player who just made the cut, leading PGA money-winner and world top-ranked
player David Duval, shot a 68 and was at even-par 213.