Day: April 15, 2018

Poulter in position for second win in three weeks at RBC HeritagePoulter in position for second win in three weeks at RBC Heritage

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – Ian Poulter’s father, Terry, is in from the U.K. to watch his son play the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town. So far, he’s gotten quite a show. Poulter extended his bogey-free streak to 45 straight holes and is in position to win for the second time in three weeks after a third-round 67 on Saturday. This, despite the fact that he’s playing for the sixth week in a row and normally spends no more than three straight weeks on the road. “I’m surprised I’m still awake, to be honest,â€� Poulter said. “Six weeks in a row. Normally after three I’m begging for a week off. … My dad said I’ve never had so much sleep before.â€� Luke List (67) and Si Woo Kim (68) will join Poulter in the final threesome Sunday at 9 a.m. Tee times have been moved up, and players will go off of split tees in order to get done around 2 p.m. ET and potentially ahead of the anticipated thunderstorms. Poulter has not made a bogey since the 10th hole of the first round, and he is only two weeks removed from his resounding victory at the Houston Open, where at one point he played 49 holes without a bogey on the way to his third PGA TOUR win. His recent consistency notwithstanding, few careers have seen more ups and downs than Poulter’s over the last year and a half. “There’s been quite a lot of lows in the last 18 months,â€� he said. Lows, as in his lowest ranking: 207th after The Honda Classic last season. (He’s back up to 31st.) Lows, as in thinking he’d lost his TOUR card after missing the cut at the Valero Texas Open last season, when it appeared that he had not fulfilled the terms of his Major Medical Extension from a 2016 foot injury. (As it turned out, the math was wrong. He had done enough, after all.) A T2 finish at THE PLAYERS Championship secured Poulter’s TOUR status for 2018, and he has kicked his game into another gear this season. After going back to the putter he used to spark Europe’s comeback at the 2012 Ryder Cup, Poulter finished T5 at the World Golf Championship-Dell Technology Match Play. He won the Houston Open a week later, earning him an eleventh-hour invitation to the Masters. Now he’s fighting through fatigue and conjuring up some of his best golf. “I needed something to change on the greens,â€� he said of the Medinah putter, with which he has ranked seventh in strokes gained: putting this week. “Going back to something that I couldn’t blame, with a putter that you know has done some great things in the past, there’s no excuses.â€� OBSERVATIONS HORSCHEL TURNS CORNER. Billy Horschel had missed five of his last six cuts and came into this week ranked 160th in the FedExCup. He will play in the second to last group on Sunday after shooting a third-round 67 to get to within two of the lead. The big difference: While he came into the week ranked 119th in strokes gained: putting, Horschel is second in that stat this week. “This course suits me well,â€� said Horschel, who tied for ninth here in his first RBC, in 2013. “I’m striking it well, putting well and thinking well.â€� That last part, the mental side, has perhaps been holding him back, he said. “It’s a little bit more of a mental thing with me right now,â€� said the four-time TOUR winner and 2014 FedExCup champion. “So I need to get back to the way I was thinking my entire career, especially ’13 and ’14.â€� KISNER TRIES TO FORGET 2017. Kevin Kisner was in position to close out a victory at the RBC Heritage a year ago, but he bogeyed four of his last eight holes for a 74 and a T11 finish. Now he’s back to try again. He shot a third-round 66, tied for the best of the day, to get to 10-under and within three shots of the lead. “Last year was pretty pitiful on the back nine Sunday,â€� said Kisner, a two-time TOUR winner who finished second at the recent World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play, and who came into this week 30th in the FedExCup. “So I’m going to try to make amends with it and do a little better on the back nine. I feel comfortable. I’m swinging great and I’ve got a lot of confidence, so I’m looking forward to it.â€� S.W. KIM OVERCOMES NERVES. It was a long wait before Si Woo Kim started his round in the last twosome with then-leader Bryson DeChambeau. So long, in fact, that Kim was surprised to realize he felt nervous. “I was a little disappointed because I was nervous on the first few holes,â€� said Kim (68, one back), who will defend his title at THE PLAYERS Championship next month. “…Having a really late tee time today, I felt that was a big waiting period for me. So my body needed to adjust to that.â€� A day after taking just 23 putts and shooting a 65 with a triple-bogey, Kim said he felt slightly less sharp on the greens (27 putts). Still, he is fourth in the field in strokes gained: putting (+5.762) for the week. NOTABLES BRYSON DECHAMBEAU – Second-round leader got off to a great start with a birdie on the first hole, but a triple-bogey at the second and doubles at 13 and 17 led to a 75. He’s seven back. DUSTIN JOHNSON – Making his first start here since he missed back-to-back cuts here in 2008-2009, world No. 1 and native South Carolinian shot 72 and was well back at 3-under. WESLEY BRYAN – Defending champ shot his second straight 71 to remain 2-under. Only three players have successfully defended at the RBC: Payne Stewart (1989-’90), Davis Love III (1991- ’92) and Boo Weekley (2007-’08). DAVIS LOVE III – After making the cut on the number, five-time winner fell back with a 74. JIM FURYK – The two-time RBC champion (2010, 2015) shot 73 to fall to 2-over. QUOTABLES I’m surprised I’m still awake.Last year was pretty pitiful on the back nine on Sunday.It’s such a great area. My wife’s family is here, and my family is here. We just tried to make a vacation out of it. SUPERLATIVES Low round: 66 by Byeong Hun An, Charley Hoffman, Kevin Kisner and Tyrone Van Aswegen. Longest drive: 356 yds (Dustin Johnson/No. 15) Longest putt: 34’ 11â€� (Charles Howell III/No. 18) Toughest hole: The par-4 3rd (4.169)

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Emergency 9: RBC Heritage, Round 3Emergency 9: RBC Heritage, Round 3

Here are nine tidbits from the third round of the 50th RBC Heritage that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina plays to 7,099 yards (Par-71). Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V For the second non-major event in a row Ian Poulter is playing from the final group on Sunday. For the second non-major event in a row, he’s posted a bogey-free round on Saturday. His 67 this week wasn’t as good as 65 at GCH but you get the point. He entered the final round in Houston with a streak of 41 holes in a row without a bogey. He enters Sunday this week a streak of 45 holes in a row without a bogey. He set the pace at 13-under-par 200 and leads by one. Houston Redux Speaking of Houston, Poulter played the final found with 23-year-old Beua Hossler. He will be joined in the final group with another 23-year old as Si Woo Kim, 23, and Luke List will round out the last trio. Unlike Hossler, Kim has won THE PLAYERS Championship and the Wyndham Championship so Poulter will have his work cut out. Kim entered the week 209th in SG: Putting but somehow is fourth this week and leads the field in putts per GIR. Did I mention he made a triple in the second round? Um, yeah. Using the Force I had Luke List as my OAD at the Houston Open so it makes sense that he’s in the mix THIS week. Let’s hope those of you who selected him in the PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO have a better result than T24. He was the 18th most-selected player this week and backed up his excellent 64 from Friday with 67 on Saturday that included only one bogey. List lost in a playoff to Justin Thomas at the Honda Classic so he’s not going to be intimidated tomorrow. He’s leading the field in SG: Tee to Green. Tartan Army Kevin Kisner already has one tartan sport coat from his win at Colonial and would like to add to his collection. He posted one of the four rounds of 66, lowest of the day, to jump into contention just three shot adrift. He lost here in a playoff to Jim Furyk after he posted a closing round 64 in 2015. The Aiken, S.C., native will have the backing of the galleries tomorrow as he looks to pick up his first win since Colonial last May. Been There, Done That Matt Kuchar is lingering at T9 and just five shots off the lead. He’s familiar with coming from off the pace as this event and winning as that was his winning formula in 2014. He began Sunday four shots behind Luke Donald before posting 64 that included holing a bunker shot on the final hole to avoid a playoff. Running Down a Dream C.T. Pan hasn’t posted a top 10 this season but don’t dismiss the former No. 1 amateur in the world. He has some scars as he went close at The RSM Classic in November of 2016, missing a playoff by a shot. He was in the penultimate group in January 2017 of the Farmers Insurance Open and finished T2. Last summer he was in the third-to-last group at the Travelers Championship before finishing T8. He’s never won as a professional. Moving Day Ryan Moore moved up 17 spots to T9 after his 67. His even-par score on his final nine included a double and a bogey so it could have been special. He only has one final round this season in the 60’s in seven tries this season … Byeong Hun An had one of those rounds of 66 to move up 30 spots to T12. The putter was the key today as he gained almost three strokes on the green. He’s 57th in proximity so he’ll need another big day with the flat stick on Sunday it appears. … It’s never easy to back up a low round with another low round but don’t tell Lucas Glover. He posted 74-65 to make the cut and wasn’t happy with just being around on the weekend as 67 jumped him 21 spots to T12. Like Kisner, the Clemson grad will have a few fans rooting for him Sunday as he looks to improve on his season-best finish of T7 (CIMB Classic). Moving Day: Wrong Way 54-hole leader Bryson DeChambeau birdied the first hole and looked to be on his way to padding his lead. After a TRIPLE on the next hole, he allowed plenty of guys to recalibrate and begin their chase. It looked like he righted the ship after birdies on Nos. 10 and 11 but two doubles on his final six holes had “The Scientist” scratching his head. He eventually signed for 75 and sits seven shots off the lead. Sadly for gamers and scientists, what goes up must come down. Study Hall … The last five winners have all been three shots or MORE behind in the final round. #Play72. … Wesley Bryan kept the defending champion’s tradition of making the cut alive. The last defending champ to miss was Davis Love, III in 1993. Bryan won’t join Boo Weekley in defending as he’ll begin Sunday 11 shots off the lead. … World No. 1 Dustin Johnson went the wrong way with 72 on Saturday to drop to T45. … Jonas Blixt and Kevin Streelman joined Poulter in signing bogey-free cards. They all shot 67.

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