The Irish Mail on Sunday

Frustrated Rahm is miles off pace as Woods fades

- By Riath Al-Samarrai AT AUGUSTA NATIONAL

NOT an awful lot of movement here on moving day. From

Jon Rahm, a man in need of speed, the only progress to observe was that he did not go backwards.

What a peculiar return to Augusta this has been for Spain’s former world No 1, whose defence of the title continues to be desperatel­y underwhelm­ing.

His third-round 72, which kept him at five over par, might be viewed through the lens of a hard-baked course that gave up precious few scoring opportunit­ies to the early starters, but there the reasons for mitigation run a little dry.

He chuntered, he grunted and he even took to mocking himself during this loop. All of the latter could be found in generous sprinkles on the par-five second hole, when for the first time in three days he found the fairway from the tee and raised his arms in celebratio­n.

This being a fairly miserable week for Rahm, he then launched his second shot into the greenside bunker and continued his streak of pars at a hole that has been the second easiest on the course.

It has been that kind of trip for the Spaniard. He arrived here with a point to prove after his defection to LIV, which has also raised the usual questions over whether those resort courses are sufficient preparatio­n for Augusta.

The form of Bryson DeChambeau so far might cut that debate off at the knees, and yet Rahm is a different kind of beast.

It has long seemed the case that this fiery character feeds off intensity. That he needs it. Week to week, he doesn’t receive so much of that heat on LIV, so you might reasonably query if he came to the Masters a little undercooke­d, but there is also a thought to be had about whether he is sensitive to changing perception­s of him.

Walking a few holes in proximity to him yesterday, there was no obviously adverse reaction from the galleries to

Rahm, because this country club isn’t that sort of place. But as a proud advocate of tradition for so long, only to then cash in on a £400million offer to join a start-up, it has been speculated within the game that he is the type to worry about being seen as a sell-out.

Such is Rahm’s quality, you suspect he will adapt and return to his best at the majors before long, but it won’t be this one.

Indeed, that was demonstrat­ed here, when there was no time to waste if he was to reset his chances.

In one regard, the weather helped — it was far gentler than the 40mph gusts we saw on Friday. But while the skies were calmer, the greens had been sucked dry by those winds and then baked by the sun on a far hotter Saturday.

The scoring was therefore limited, but equally true is that Rahm did not take his chances, which included six-foot misses on both the fourth and 13th greens. His driving was mostly sharp, his approaches were a little loose, and as such he faced a considerab­le number of opportunit­ies in that 15foot range. The only one that disappeare­d below ground came at the 17th, his single birdie of the day, which balanced out his blip at seven, when he flew his second into the trap.

Rahm was less than satisfied. ‘Friday was terrible but today I gave myself plenty of chances,’ he said. ‘I just didn’t make them. Luckily made the one on 17 to have the only birdie of the day.’

On Friday the story was

Tiger Woods, who broke a record by making the cut for a 24th straight time in dreadful weather. His exhibition of will was extraordin­ary in reaching the weekend.

But yesterday it seemed that effort was taking its toll — he was six-over-par for his round after 14 holes, seven over for the tournament, with most of the damage acquired in backto-back double bogeys on seven and eight.

Shane Lowry looked to the heavens as his approach from 118 yards on the 14th curled down the slope and into the cup for an eagle. It was a welcome moment for the Clara man, and brought him back to four over, though he squandered the benefits when carding bogeys on 15 and 17 to sign for a 75.

I made plenty of chances, I just didn’t take them

 ?? ?? BAD WEEK: Jon Rahm tees off on the 11th hole
BAD WEEK: Jon Rahm tees off on the 11th hole

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