Goyodos take his first 54-hole lead at TPC
Tour veteran is only player to break par all three days.
By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
PONTE VEDRA BEACH — Paul Goydos would love to say he saw this coming, but he’s too honest.
He had never broken
70 in nine previous appearances at The Players Championship, yet a 2-under 70 on Saturday made him the only player to break par all three days on the TPC Sawgrass and gave him a one-shot lead over Kenny Perry.
Since his last victory 16 months ago on the PGA Tour — and only the second of his career — he has yet to crack the top 20. But after a birdie on the island-green 17th and a hybrid out of the trees to make par on the final hole, he wound up with a 54-hole lead for the first time in his career.
“But I’ve only been on tour 16 years,” Goydos deadpanned. “I guess I was due.”
This is the leader at the richest event on the PGA Tour — a 43-year-old former substitute teacher who is raising two teenager daughters. He has no endorsement deal, so he bought a Long Beach State baseball cap last week in an airport with the nickname “Dirtbags” on the bill. Even in 90-degree weather, he keeps his shirt buttoned to the top because “I have no shoulders.”
Was he shocked to be
holding a one-shot lead?
“Pretty much,” Goydos said. “You have to go by the track record, and on this golf course, mine stinks.”
Perhaps it is with such self-deprecating humor that Goydos appeared so immune to the mounting pressure and a course that continued to get tougher in hot, blustery
conditions. He answered every bogey with a birdie, none bigger than a wedge just inside 10 feet on the island-green 17th and a birdie for the outright lead.
He was at 7-under 209, the highest score to lead on the Stadium Course since David Duval was at 212 in 1999.
Perry saved par with a nifty wedge on the 18th hole for a 72 that put him at 210 and in the final group Sunday, a huge opportunity in his quest to make the Ryder Cup team in his home state of Kentucky.
Sergio Garcia hit the ball as well as anyone for the second straight day, and got nothing in return.
Garcia was tied for the lead standing on the 17th tee, but he three-putted from just outside 10 feet, then hit into the rough on the 18th and closed with another bogey for a 73, leaving him three shots behind.
Through three rounds, Goydos has taken 78 putts,
18 fewer than Garcia.
The numbers are
shrinking, with only 13
players remaining under par, just three of those with a major to their credit.
Getting the most attention was Phil Mickelson, trying to become the first repeat
champion in the 35-year
history of this tournament. He was making a move up
the leaderboard until he knocked his tee shot into the water on the 14th and took double bogey. He still wound up with a 71 and was in the group at 2-under 214, five shots behind and very much in the game.
Perry made the only birdie among 74 players on the 14th hole and had 14 pars, perhaps the most meaningful one on the 18th. After driving into the rough and laying up short, he hit sand wedge to 10 feet and made the putt to stay alive.
Fred Couples didn’t make a birdie until the 11th hole and shot 77, taking himself out of the tournament. Ernie Els was 4 over through his first four holes to return a 74, but he was still eight behind.
Anthony Kim appeared to finally run out of gas after winning the Wachovia Championship last week. He was two shots out of the lead until running off four straight bogeys, then hitting into the water on the final two holes for a triple bogey-double bogey finish and a 79.
He had never broken
70 in nine previous appearances at The Players Championship, yet a 2-under 70 on Saturday made him the only player to break par all three days on the TPC Sawgrass and gave him a one-shot lead over Kenny Perry.
Since his last victory 16 months ago on the PGA Tour — and only the second of his career — he has yet to crack the top 20. But after a birdie on the island-green 17th and a hybrid out of the trees to make par on the final hole, he wound up with a 54-hole lead for the first time in his career.
“But I’ve only been on tour 16 years,” Goydos deadpanned. “I guess I was due.”
This is the leader at the richest event on the PGA Tour — a 43-year-old former substitute teacher who is raising two teenager daughters. He has no endorsement deal, so he bought a Long Beach State baseball cap last week in an airport with the nickname “Dirtbags” on the bill. Even in 90-degree weather, he keeps his shirt buttoned to the top because “I have no shoulders.”
Was he shocked to be
holding a one-shot lead?
“Pretty much,” Goydos said. “You have to go by the track record, and on this golf course, mine stinks.”
Perhaps it is with such self-deprecating humor that Goydos appeared so immune to the mounting pressure and a course that continued to get tougher in hot, blustery
conditions. He answered every bogey with a birdie, none bigger than a wedge just inside 10 feet on the island-green 17th and a birdie for the outright lead.
He was at 7-under 209, the highest score to lead on the Stadium Course since David Duval was at 212 in 1999.
Perry saved par with a nifty wedge on the 18th hole for a 72 that put him at 210 and in the final group Sunday, a huge opportunity in his quest to make the Ryder Cup team in his home state of Kentucky.
Sergio Garcia hit the ball as well as anyone for the second straight day, and got nothing in return.
Garcia was tied for the lead standing on the 17th tee, but he three-putted from just outside 10 feet, then hit into the rough on the 18th and closed with another bogey for a 73, leaving him three shots behind.
Through three rounds, Goydos has taken 78 putts,
18 fewer than Garcia.
The numbers are
shrinking, with only 13
players remaining under par, just three of those with a major to their credit.
Getting the most attention was Phil Mickelson, trying to become the first repeat
champion in the 35-year
history of this tournament. He was making a move up
the leaderboard until he knocked his tee shot into the water on the 14th and took double bogey. He still wound up with a 71 and was in the group at 2-under 214, five shots behind and very much in the game.
Perry made the only birdie among 74 players on the 14th hole and had 14 pars, perhaps the most meaningful one on the 18th. After driving into the rough and laying up short, he hit sand wedge to 10 feet and made the putt to stay alive.
Fred Couples didn’t make a birdie until the 11th hole and shot 77, taking himself out of the tournament. Ernie Els was 4 over through his first four holes to return a 74, but he was still eight behind.
Anthony Kim appeared to finally run out of gas after winning the Wachovia Championship last week. He was two shots out of the lead until running off four straight bogeys, then hitting into the water on the final two holes for a triple bogey-double bogey finish and a 79.
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