Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Hayden Buckley makes pair of eagles to take two-shot lead at Sony Open in Hawaii

Hayden Buckley makes pair of eagles to take two-shot lead at Sony Open in Hawaii

HONOLULU — Hayden Buckley started and ended the back nine at Waialae with eagles Saturday for a second straight 6-under 64, giving him a two-shot lead and creating some separation going into the final round of the Sony Open in Hawaii. Buckley holed out a wedge from 133 yards on the 10th hole. He finished his day with an approach to 2 feet on the par-5 18th hole. He was at 15-under 195, and his two-shot lead might have been the biggest surprise in a third round that at one point featured an eight-way tie for the lead. Even now, Buckley has a long road ahead of him. In his second year on the PGA TOUR, he had never had the lead after any round. And five players are within three shots of the lead on a TOUR where it seems no lead is safe. Only last week, two-time major champion Collin Morikawa lost a six-shot lead on the back nine at Kapalua. Nine of the leading 15 players at Waialae have never won on the PGA TOUR. Buckley led by two over Chris Kirk (68), Ben Taylor (65) and David Lipsky (66), the Californian who has spent the majority of his career in Asia. Kirk began the third round with a one-shot lead and good vibes because of his runner-up finish two years ago that enabled him to keep full status on TOUR. His first shot sailed toward the houses down the right side of the first fairways, out-of-bounds and leading to a double bogey. He was otherwise solid from there, though he missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the 18th that would have put him in the final group. Lipsky knows the feeling. His opening drive went left, and bounced along the cement path right of the driving range until it settled outside the white stakes. He managed to limit the damage to a bogey when he made a 25-foot putt. He followed that by taking two chips to get onto the second green for another bogey, and then he had seven birdies the rest of the way. “It’s never ideal when your ball goes 50 yards down the path OB,” Lipsky said. “I’m pretty happy with how I played and how I handled those first two holes.” While the third round wasn’t a bizarre as Friday — Jordan Spieth went from a share of the lead to missing the cut, Rory Sabbatini was one off the lead until three straight double bogeys — there was enough to realize 18 more holes might feel like a marathon to those trying to win for the first time. S.H. Kim, the rookie from South Korea, ran off four straight birdies to take the lead at the turn. And then on the 10th hole, the third easiest at Waialae, he had 124 yards from the middle of the fairway and made double bogey — an approach that bounded over the green, a chip to 30 feet and three putts. Byeong Hun An had a 66 and was tied for 16th, six shots behind. That includes his quadruple-bogey 8 on the 10th hole after his drive was in the middle of the fairway, 87 yards from the hole. An went long going after a back pin, muffed a chip, and twice had a wedge slide under the ball sitting in thick grass. It was a mess. Andrew Putnam and Nick Taylor each had a 62, the low round of the tournament. That got Putnam within three shots of the lead. Taylor made the 36-hole cut on the number and goes into the final day five shots behind.

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Storms dominate the day at Barbasol ChampionshipStorms dominate the day at Barbasol Championship

NICHOLASVILLE, Kentucky – Saturday will be a fingers-crossed kind of day at the Barbasol Championship. Severe weather on Friday set the schedule of play back significantly and there is a 70 percent chance of a repeat performance by Mother Nature when the new day dawns. Troy Merritt was one of the lucky ones. He waited out the first delay and then scooted in with a 67 that gave him a two-stroke lead about 30 minutes before play was called for the second time at 3:25 p.m. Billy Horschel also was able to finish, firing a 66 that left him in solo second at 13 under. Richy Werenski and Tom Lovelady weren’t so lucky, both stranded on the 18th hole when the siren sounded. The second storm was particularly furious. Tornado warnings were posted as thunder rumbled, lightning strafed the sky, rain came down with a vengeance and tree limbs fell to the ground. The Military Outpost hospitality tend ended up in the pond on the eighth hole. Homes and hotels in the vicinity lost power and nearby streetlights went on the fritz. At 5:50 p.m. tournament officials made the decision to suspend play overnight. A total of 23 players in the afternoon wave had yet to tee off, including Brittany Lincicome, the eight-time LPGA champion who is just the sixth woman to play in a PGA TOUR event. “We suspended for the day because of rain that was still expected and maintenance would need a couple of hours to get the golf course ready – which would be dark,â€� said Steve Carman, the PGA TOUR Tournament Director. Play is scheduled to resume at 7:30 a.m. Carman estimates that approximately 5 hours and 40 minutes are necessary to complete the second round. Once that’s done, the cut will be made and the third round will begin in threesomes off two tees. With any luck, the third round could be completed by Saturday night. “We played enough golf today that it could be accomplished,â€� Carman said. “But we’ve got to get a break from Mother Nature. “The forecast is for a 70 percent chance of pop-up thunderstorms similar today but hopefully not as severe.â€� Fingers crossed. “Just hoping to start the next round,â€� Merritt said. “That’s about all I’m thinking about. … We just have to see what the weather does. We can’t get ahead of ourselves. There is no sense really in setting a number when you don’t know exactly what the weather is going to do. “Just do the best I can do is try to stay ahead of whoever is behind me.â€� NOTABLES Hunter Mahan has fond memories of Kentucky as a member of Paul Azinger’s victorious Ryder Cup team. The 2008 matches were held at Valhalla, which is about 80 miles from Keene Trace Golf Club, and marked just the second American win in the last seven meetings between the U.S. and Europe. To say the partisan crowd was loud would be an understatement. “It was unlike anything I’ve seen or been a part of,â€� Mahan said. “It didn’t feel like golf. Felt like a rock concert half the time. Just great intensity, fire, but so much fun.â€� Mahan would like to make another great memory in the Bluegrass state this week at the Barbasol Championship. He fired a 68 on Friday had moved to 10 under and within four strokes of Troy Merritt’s lead when play was suspended due to impeding storms. The six-time PGA TOUR, whose last win came in 2014, is looking for his first top-10 since he tied for fourth at the 2015 Deutsche Bank Championship. “Once your technique goes and you can’t swing the way you normally have, no amount of confidence or whatever is going to help,â€� Mahan said. “No amount of practice, if you’re doing something wrong, you’re just going to keep doing it wrong. Finally feeling comfortable, finally feeling like I know how to attack pins and I know how far I’m going to hit the shot and all those things that encompass being confident on the golf course and not having any fear of the result. Troy Merritt started the second round where he left off, making an 8-footer for birdie on No. 1 and two-putting from 45 feet for another at the par-5 second. He went on to follow that sizzling 62 with a solid 67 that left him at 14 under and owning a one-stroke advantage. Friday’s round wasn’t without the occasional miscue – he had gone bogey-free in tying the course record the previous day – but Merritt wasn’t complaining. “We had a lot more lengthy birdie putts today than we did yesterday, but all this all pretty solid day,â€� he said. Merritt played with Mahan and said seeing all those putts go down – he made seven birdies while Mahan had five – helped him keep the pedal down. “It’s always nice to play with a guy that’s making birdies, especially if you’re keeping up or maybe doing slightly better, just because we want to see good golf, too,â€� he said. “We’re golf fans. We want to see guys play well because it’s going to make us play well.â€� Like Mahan, Merritt is hoping to end a victory drought – his last came in 2015 – and play his way into the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time in two years (CK). (Merritt is currently 131st in the standings.) Josh Teater grew up and still lives in Lexington, Kentucky, which is about 45 minutes from Keene Trace. So it’s not surprising that the Morehead State graduate has many friends in the gallery and a host of sportswriters hanging on his every word. Teater spent the better part of six years on the PGA TOUR and is currently playing the Web.com Tour in hopes of getting his card back. He ranks 31st on the money list and could be playing in the Web.com Tour event in Omaha this week but when he was offered a sponsor’s exemption for the Barbasol Championship it was a no-brainer to say yes. He’s making the most of the opportunity, too, firing a 66 on Friday that left him in a tie for fifth when play was suspended due to inclement weather. “This is kind of my major,â€� said Teater, who won the 2004 Kentucky Open on the Champions course. “Has been since they announced it, you know. Top 25 on the Web does get you on the TOUR, but a win here also does. That’s what we’re shooting for. I wouldn’t miss it unless I was across the pond.â€� QUOTABLE It was huge. I saw kind of the note on the scoreboard, and I didn’t even really think about it when I had that one-footer to tap in. Sometimes you’ll mark them; sometimes you won’t, but I’m glad I tapped it in.

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