Waikato Times

Tie for the lead

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American golfer Dustin Johnson overcame a sloppy back nine by making a 10-foot birdie on the

18th hole at Pebble Beach for a two-under-par 70 that gave him a share of the lead going into the final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in California. Ted Potter Jr. needed to birdie one of his final three holes for a 59 at Monterey Peninsula. He finished par-bogeybogey for a 62 and was tied with Johnson. They were at 14-under

201. Jason Day, coming off a victory two weeks ago at Torrey Pines, shot a 69 at Pebble Beach and was two shots behind.

‘‘I have mixed emotions. I know had so much more to give but I’m happy I landed a solid run.’’

He was thankful for the support from back home and also the loud Kiwi presence at Phoenix Park, South Korea yesterday.

‘‘On this course you have to be perfect. The last run I was really nervous up top.’’

Although the Kiwi came close to a medal-winning effort, the second and third rounds of these events are crucial and usually when the cream of the crop pull out all the stops to land their best runs, such as USA’s gold medal winner Redmond Gerard.

Garcia Knight went for it in the third round, but didn’t pull off the magic that his competitor­s managed to do.

His first run score would be his best before a less impressive second run of just 52.98 and a nervous flop in his third of 24.35.

Garcia Knight finished fifth behind USA’s Redmond Gerard

(87.16), Canadian’s Max Parrot

(86.00), Mark McMorris (85.20) and Norway’s Staale Sandbech (81.01).

His qualifying round score of 80.10 also wouldn’t have got him on the podium in the finals.

Garcia’s shot at becoming New Zealand’s second medallist in the history of the event was not to be. New Zealand remains with one medal from 25 years ago when Annelise Coberger claimed silver in the alpine skiing slalom at the 1992 Games in Albertvill­e, France.

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