Albuquerque Journal

Hadwin joins club with a 59

It is the ninth sub-60 round in PGA history

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LA QUINTA, Calif. — The temperatur­e barely climbed into the 60s on a spectacula­r, clear afternoon in the desert after two rainy days. Adam Hadwin stopped counting at 59 — 13-under 59, that is.

The 29-year-old Canadian shot the ninth sub-60 round in PGA Tour history and the second in 10 days to take the third-round lead Saturday in the CareerBuil­der Challenge.

“I think everybody talks about kind of they were in a zone, and I think that’s kind of what happened,” Hadwin said. “I was thinking about it. I knew exactly where I was. I knew exactly what I needed to do. It just didn’t seem to matter.”

Hadwin made a 6-foot birdie putt on the par-4 17th and got up-anddown for par — making a 3-footer — from just off the green on the par-4 18th at La Quinta Country Club.

“Last thing I wanted to do was miss a 3-footer for 59,” Hadwin said. “So, I was more relieved than anything walking off that green.”

Justin Thomas had an 11-under 59 last week in Hawaii in the first round of his Sony Open victory. Hadwin matched David Duval’s tournament record, a 13-under 59 on the Arnold Palmer Private Course in the final round of his 1999 victory. Jim Furyk shot a tour-record 12-under 58 last year in the Travelers Championsh­ip.

Hadwin was at 17-under 199 after starting the day tied for 49th at 4 under, a stroke below the eventual cut. He played the first two days at PGA West, shooting 71 on the Jack Nicklaus Tournament Course and 69 on the Stadium Course — the site of the final round Sunday.

“The Stadium Course is a much tougher course than La Quinta,” Hadwin said. “It’s a Sunday. I’ve got a chance to win a golf tournament. That’s what you want going into Sunday, and I’m excited about that. … They say one of hardest things in golf is to follow up a low round. I have to figure out a way to convince myself that I just shot 67.”

The former Louisville player is the first Canadian — he was born in Moose Jaw, Saskatchew­an, and grew up in Abbortsfor­d, British Columbia — to break 60 on the tour. He’s also the first to accomplish the feat on a par-72 course since Duval, and the only non-winner to break 60 on the tour.

“I think what gives sort of me the most confidence is that I knew exactly what I needed to do and through that whole process, if anything, I was thinking 58,” Hadwin said. “So, to be able to do it when I needed to. I know I was nervous. The putt barely went in on 17, and I only had 6 feet.”

Hadwin had 13 birdies in the bogey-free round, hit 12 of 14 fairways, 15 of 18 greens in regulation, and needed only 21 putts. He opened with a par with the temperatur­e in the low 50s and snow sparkling on the mountain peaks, birdied the next six and added another on No. 9 for a front-nine 29. He birdied Nos. 11-15 to get to 12 under.

Hadwin credited playing partner Colt Knost for keeping him relaxed.

“He’s a character, and so everything was very light,” Hadwin said.

Rookie Dominic Bozzelli was a stroke back after a 69 on the Nicklaus layout.

HSBC: In Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Tyrrell Hatton grabbed the consciousn­ess of the wider golfing public with his top-10 finishes at the British Open and U.S. PGA Championsh­ip last year.

He is proving the hot summer was no fluke.

Hatton, a 25-year-old from England, followed up his impressive performanc­es in the majors by winning his first senior title at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championsh­ip and finishing second at the seasonendi­ng World Tour Championsh­ip in Dubai.

Now, at a career-high ranking of No. 23, he is closing in on an ever bigger result.

Hatton rolled in an 8-foot birdie on the 18th hole for a 4-under-par 68 and the outright lead after three rounds of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip on Saturday.

A host of big names — including major champions in Dustin Johnson, Martin Kaymer and Henrik Stenson — are within three shots in the European Tour’s strongest field of the year, so Sunday’s final round will be a big test of Hatton’s resolve.

Especially since this is his first competitiv­e event in nearly two months.

“I didn’t do a whole lot of work,” Hatton said of his offseason. “I spent most of my time playing Xbox and chilling out at home, to be perfectly honest, so (it’s) a little bit of a surprise to see where I’m at this week.”

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Adam Hadwin smiles on the 18th green on his way to shooting a 59 in the third round of the CareerBuil­der Challenge on Saturday.
CHRIS CARLSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Adam Hadwin smiles on the 18th green on his way to shooting a 59 in the third round of the CareerBuil­der Challenge on Saturday.

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