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Third Round of the U.S. Open Is Under Way Third Round of the U.S. Open Is Under Way
(35 minutes later)
After a week of weather woes and doubts about the course’s worthiness, the United States Open at Merion Golf Club on Saturday looked a lot like any other Open: a bunched-up leader board full of players struggling to keep par in their sights.After a week of weather woes and doubts about the course’s worthiness, the United States Open at Merion Golf Club on Saturday looked a lot like any other Open: a bunched-up leader board full of players struggling to keep par in their sights.
Only two players with scores under par entered the third round, which started Saturday only after the second round finished in the morning. Those two, Phil Mickelson and Billy Horschel, teed off last at 2:40 p.m. and made routine pars on the first hole. Ahead of them, few players were making much headway on a course that has proved its mettle over the past few days. One who has made a bit of a move is John Senden, who joined Mickelson and Horschel at one under with birdies on the first two holes. Only two players with scores under par entered the third round, which started Saturday only after the second round finished in the morning. Those two, Phil Mickelson and Billy Horschel, teed off last at 2:40 p.m. and after two routine pars on the first two holes, both missed the green on No. 3 and missed their putts to save par.
That dropped them one shot behind leaders John Senden, who used birdies on the first two holes to reach one under, and Justin Rose, who dropped a birdie putt on the par-5 No. 4 to join the lead. Luke Donald joined them with a long, 20-foot birdie putt on No. 4. Mickelson and Horschel found themselves in a logjam at even par that also includes Charl Schwartzel, Luke Donald and Steve Stricker.
Despite doubts that Merion was no longer long enough nor tough enough to provide the prototypical (read: punishing) Open test, the going has been anything but easy. The waves of rain that inundated the course all week did not succeed in turning the greens into spongy welcome mats, as some feared, but it did add a layer of squishiness to the rough, only deepening its ball-swallowing potential.Despite doubts that Merion was no longer long enough nor tough enough to provide the prototypical (read: punishing) Open test, the going has been anything but easy. The waves of rain that inundated the course all week did not succeed in turning the greens into spongy welcome mats, as some feared, but it did add a layer of squishiness to the rough, only deepening its ball-swallowing potential.
The early holes did yield a few birdies. Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy — playing together for a third straight day after they each finished the second round at three over par — both walked off No. 1 with a birdie. Both quickly found trouble on subsequent holes. McIlroy drove into trouble and took bogeys on both No. 2 and 3 and Woods joined him with a bogey on No. 3. The early holes did yield a few birdies. Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy — playing together for a third straight day after they each finished the second round at three over par — both walked off No. 1 with a birdie. Both quickly found trouble on subsequent holes. McIlroy drove into trouble and took bogeys on both No. 2 and 3 and Woods joined him with a bogey on No. 3 and again on Nos. 5 and 6. Woods slipped to five over.
Charley Hoffman, who finished his second round in disastrous fashion with a triple-bogey on the par-4 No. 10, managed two birdies in his first four holes to push himself to two over. The second one came on the par-5 No. 4, when he played his third shot out of a water hazard by taking off his shoes and rolling up his pants and chipping in his fourth shot from off the green for the birdie. Edward Loar used an eagle on the par-5 No. 2 to reach two over as well. He then added a birdie on No. 5 to reach one over.Charley Hoffman, who finished his second round in disastrous fashion with a triple-bogey on the par-4 No. 10, managed two birdies in his first four holes to push himself to two over. The second one came on the par-5 No. 4, when he played his third shot out of a water hazard by taking off his shoes and rolling up his pants and chipping in his fourth shot from off the green for the birdie. Edward Loar used an eagle on the par-5 No. 2 to reach two over as well. He then added a birdie on No. 5 to reach one over.
Nicolas Colsaerts has had an adventurous start to his round, going from double-bogey on No. 2 to an eagle on No. 2 to a bogey on No. 3. He sits at two over.
Saturday’s king of calamity was Sergio Garcia, who barely made the cut, played several holes worth of golf on No. 15. He hit three balls out of bounds and walked off with a 10. That sent him skyrocketing to 14-over par.Saturday’s king of calamity was Sergio Garcia, who barely made the cut, played several holes worth of golf on No. 15. He hit three balls out of bounds and walked off with a 10. That sent him skyrocketing to 14-over par.
While Woods grabs his share of attention in his effort to break his major tournament drought, Mickelson is also trying to break a drought. He has never won the United States Open despite five second-place finishes, most recently in 2009. The tournament does not naturally suit his high-risk, high-reward game because Open courses rarely reward risk.While Woods grabs his share of attention in his effort to break his major tournament drought, Mickelson is also trying to break a drought. He has never won the United States Open despite five second-place finishes, most recently in 2009. The tournament does not naturally suit his high-risk, high-reward game because Open courses rarely reward risk.
And Merion has followed that trend nicely, despite all the hand-wringing.And Merion has followed that trend nicely, despite all the hand-wringing.