samedi 28 juin 2014

Posted by Unknown
No comments | 15:38

Tiger's gone but there will be a man in red and black playing in the final group on Sunday at Congressional.


Much of the momentum built up over the past week at the Quicken Loans National was stunted Friday night when Tiger Woods headed home early with a missed cut in his first event since early March. In the third round, the crowds were thinner, the media horde was diminished, and no one player emerged to take control and as the headliner for the weekend.


On Saturday, the biggest star was probably the venue, Congressional, which is likely playing tougher than it did for the 2011 U.S. Open, beat up the field and almost no one could run away or make a charge on moving day. Seung-Yol Noh made the biggest move on a day where there were almost no low numbers available, shooting a 5-under 66 to rocket almost 40 spots up the leaderboard and into a tie for second place. There's been no rain since a downpour on Wednesday night, and even then the greens were rolling at 12 on the stimpmeter. Noh said conditions were getting firm and fast up on the greens, and that was apparent as approach shots from different tee elevations resulted in balls continually bouncing through or rolling off many of these putting surfaces. Congressional is already one of the longest courses on Tour, and while the firmness shortens it a little, the players would rather have it soft and long than try and play into dry greens. It was hard to find anyone else approaching that 65 number, especially in the final pairings, and thus Noh was able to rise right up into contention with 18 more holes to go.


Patrick Reed was the one player in the final groups to hold on while everyone around him gave shots back to the course. Reed rolled in a birdie on the par-5 16th to get back to even-par for the day, and that was good enough to go to sleep on sole possession of the 54-hole lead at 6-under. Reed has been horrible since winning at Doral and making those infamous "top 5 in the world" comments. He missed five cuts and his best result was a T35 finish at the U.S. Open two weeks ago, when no one was a factor aside from Martin Kaymer. He had broken par in just four of 27 rounds since winning at Doral. In fairness, Reed also took several weeks off while his wife was in the last throes of pregnancy and then gave birth to their child. With that intervening stretch (which coincided with Tiger's absence) in the wilderness now passed, Reed appears to be back to his early-season form that earned him titles at Humana and Doral.


With no one making moves around him, Reed had the lead early on the front nine, carding back-to-back birdies at Nos. 4 and 5 to get to 8-under at one point. He'd give those back before he made the turn, and then drop back into the group at 5-under with a tough bogey at the par-3 13th. The pin was tucked at that green, and the players had little room to land it from a tee that was well below the putting surface. Reed's tee shot went a little long and got held up in the thick three-inch rough behind the green, and he'd have to ask Ricky Barnes to mark his ball in the first cut as he chipped out sideways just to get on the putting surface. Reed could not get up and down from that spot but that would be the only shot he'd drop on Congressional's tough back nine.


Just three holes later, Reed would pull back to even on the day on the gettable par-5 16th. This was where we saw Tiger at his most frustrated in his return on Thursday, dropping an f-bomb as he walked off the green without a birdie. So posting a red number is almost expected on what can set up as a two-shot par-5. Reed took three shots, but his wedge into the green left him with a tap-in to get back into the lead and even for the day.



It was a nice bounce back for Reed, who burned the edge on a birdie attempt on the previous hole and heard it from one member of the DC crowd.




Reed will play with Noh on Sunday afternoon, while Marc Leishman and Freddie Jacobson will be the penultimate group out in the final round. All three players are two shots back of Reed.


We will have a man in red and black sitting on the lead and in the final group on Sunday, it just won't be the guy most people are used to. Here's where things stand at Congressional after 54 holes:





















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Place Player Score Today Round 1 Round 2 Round 3
1Patrick Reed-6E686871
T2Seung-yul Noh-4-5737066
T2Freddie Jacobson-4E677171
T2Marc Leishman-42706673
T5Richard Lee-3-3746868
T5Shawn Stefani-3-3746868
T5Ben Martin-3-1726870
T5Justin Rose-3E746571
T5Brendon de Jonge-3E716871
T5Hudson Swafford-32696873
T11Brendon Todd-2-2727069
T11Bill Haas-2E687271
T11Brendan Steele-2E746671
T11Ricky Barnes-24676975
T15Charley Hoffman-1-3727268
T15Gary Woodland-1-2727169
T15Billy Hurley III-1-1697370
T15Matt Every-11716972
T15Billy Horschel-13706874
T15Oliver Goss-15706676
T21Scott StallingsE-3757068
T21Andrew LoupeE-2747069
T21Jordan SpiethE-2747069
T21Nick WatneyE-2697569
T21Hunter MahanE-2717369
T21Robert GarrigusE-1737070
T21Daniel SummerhaysEE707271
T21Brady WattEE717171
T21Tim WilkinsonE1707172
T21Michael PutnamE1697272
T21Stuart ApplebyE5706776
T32Angel Cabrera1-2717469
T32Ryan Palmer1-1737170
T32Steven Bowditch1-1737170
T32J.B. Holmes1-1727270
T32John Huh1-1727270
T32Stewart Cink1E746971
T32Andres Romero11707272
T32Geoff Ogilvy11707272
T32Cameron Tringale12707173
T41John Rollins2E727271
T41Ben Curtis2E756971
T41Tyrone van Aswegen22687473
T41Patrick Rodgers22736973
T41Brandt Snedeker24707075
T41Peter Hanson24726875
T41George McNeill26696977
T48Webb Simpson3E727371
T48Brian Davis3E727371
T48Trevor Immelman3E747171
T48Greg Chalmers31667872
T48Heath Slocum31727272
T48Charles Howell III31717372
T48Spencer Levin32697473
T48Davis Love III33727074
T48Erik Compton34687375
T48K.J. Choi34697275
T48Retief Goosen35697176
T48Morgan Hoffmann37706878
T60J.J. Henry43746974
T60Carl Pettersson45726976
T62John Merrick52747173
T62Scott Brown53727274
T62Sean O'Hair53737174
T62Roberto Castro54717275
T62Russell Knox57736778
T67James Driscoll63717474
T67D.H. Lee64737175
T67Andrew Svoboda65717276
T67Kevin Chappell65717276
T71Robert Streb74747175
T71Bo Van Pelt77717178
T71Jason Bohn77717178
74Kevin Kisner87756878
75Rory Sabbatini96717477





from SBNation.com - All Posts http://ift.tt/1ms8h7a

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