Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Shubhankar retains twoshot lead, eyes history in Mexico

- Agencies sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

WCG DAY 3 21yearold Indian leads US fivetime Major winner Phil Mickelson by two shots after Rd 3 MEXICOCITY:

Shubhankar Sharma upstaged the biggest names in golf by bravely maintainin­g his overnight two-shot lead following the third round of the $10 mn World Golf Championsh­ips, venturing into a territory hitherto unknown to Indian golfers.

The 21-year-old became the first Indian to hold a 54-hole lead, as he added a grinding two-under 69 to move to 13-under.

Shubhankar, with three birdies against one bogey on the front nine, was four shots clear at one stage. He later had two birdies and bogeys but made some great saves, including one on 18th. He is two ahead of some of the biggest names in contempora­ry golf on a crowded leaderboar­d.

The top-10 after three rounds are separated by four shots and they include four Major winners -- Phil Mickelson (65) and Sergio Garcia (69) at T-2, Dustin Johnson (68) at T-6 and at Tied-10th is Justin Thomas, who was on fire with a record-breaking 9-under 62 at the Club de Golf Chapultepe­c.

The best position for an Indian at a WGC was Tied-1st for Jeev Milkha Singh after the first round at WGC at Doral in 2009 and at the same event, Jeev was T-9 after second round, T-3 after three rounds and eventually finished T-4, the best-ever for an Indian. The winner was Mickelson.

Arjun Atwal, in 2010, carried a 3-shot lead into the final round of the Wyndham Championsh­ips, which he won by one shot, and more recently Anirban Lahiri carried a four-shot lead into the final round of the 2016 CIMB Classic, but finished Tied-third.

YOUNGEST IN FIELD

While Shubhankar at 21 years and seven months is the youngest in the field, Mickelson stands at the other end of the age spectrum at 47 years and eight months. It is not just Mickelson who is in hot pursuit, but a whole lot of others.

Keeping calm, a trait he picked from his father, Col M L Sharma, an Armyman, who gave him all his time in the growing years, Shubhankar showed little emotion even while chatting with his caddie, Gurbaaz Mann, on the course. But the 11-12 footer on the 18th for par did see him heave a sigh of relief and a fist pump.

“It was very important. Obviously Rafa had a birdie putt and

TENNIS

could have been a two-shot swing. I think I got a bit unlucky on the second shot. Right before my shot we checked the wind and it was still.”

ALTITUDE ADJUSTMENT In Mexico players have to adjust for the higher altitude which makes ball travel almost 15 % more and then there is distance to be adjusted for uphill layout.

Shubhankar could potentiall­y have a career-changing win with the winner’s cheque worth $1.7 million, an exemption onto the PGA TOUR through the 2020-21 season, 550 FedExCup points and starts in almost every major championsh­ip including The Players Championsh­ip this season.

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 ?? AFP ?? India’s Shubhankar Sharma is one round away from becoming the youngest winner of a World Golf Championsh­ips event.
AFP India’s Shubhankar Sharma is one round away from becoming the youngest winner of a World Golf Championsh­ips event.

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