Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No hiding now

Koepka takes slim lead into final round

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ST. LOUIS — Brooks Koepka sometimes gets ignored on television in the list of notable scores. In the gym, he gets overlooked by Dustin Johnson and Tiger Woods.

There is no mistaking him in a major.

Koepka bullied rain-softened Bellerive on Saturday in the PGA Championsh­ip, building a five-shot lead until he had to scramble to avoid a slide on the back nine. He settled for a 4-under 66 and a two-shot lead over Adam Scott going into the final round of the final major of the year.

At stake is a chance to win three of the past six majors he played, and to join an elite list — Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan and

Gene players Sarazen to win — the as U.S. the Open only and PGA Championsh­ip in the same year.

“You can’t hide when you’re on the top of the leaderboar­d,” he said. “You can’t hide my name. So just try to get to the top of the leaderboar­d and work from there.”

Even so, one misstep and it might be easy to get lost at this major.

Scott had a 65, despite missing three putts from 6 feet, two of them for birdie. He is struggling through his worst season since he turned pro in 2000, and now has a chance to turn it into a year he won’t forget.

Ten players were within four shots of the lead, no name bigger — no buzz bigger — than Woods. He completed his second round Saturday morning with a 66, and then had another 66 in the afternoon that was so good it was the worst he could have shot. He made nothing but pars over the last 10 holes. On seven of the last eight holes, Woods had a birdie or eagle putt of 20 feet or closer and missed them all.

He was four shots behind in a tie for sixth, the same spot he was in going in the final day at the British Open last month, when he briefly had the lead before fading.

“I just wish I could have got myself a couple more shots closer to the lead,” Woods said. “But there aren’t a lot of guys up there in front of me.”

The list included Jon Rahm (66), Rickie Fowler (69) and Gary Woodland (71), who gave himself a chance despite falling six shots behind after a triple bogey from his footprints in the sand at No. 10.

Koepka was at 12-under 198 and even with his major pedigree — the first player with back-to-back U.S. Opens in 29 years — he will play in the final group of a major for the first time. Koepka was in the penultimat­e group at the U.S. Opens he won.

He plans to spend this morning working out, as he has done all week at a local gym. Koepka was there Saturday morning with Johnson and noticed everyone trying to get pictures of the world’s No. 1 player.

“They were like, ‘Did you see the No. 1 player in the world was here?’ I don’t know what to say to that,” Koepka said with a laugh.

He cares only about inside the ropes, and he thrives in the majors.

“Every shot’s so important out here,” he said.

No shots were more important than a four-hole stretch he played in 2 over that turned today into a possible free-for-all.

An 8-foot par save on No. 13 gave him a five-shot lead, but then two errant drives led to consecutiv­e bogeys — the first one from 100 feet away in a bunker, ending a streak of 43 holes without a bogey, the next one when his tee shot stopped rolling at the base of a tree and forced him to take a one-shot penalty to move it away. He had to get up-anddown to limit the damage to a bogey. And then he made a 10-foot par putt.

“Try to make the best out of a bad situation and keep rolling,” Koepka said.

Koepka won the U.S. Open on two different courses that required one extreme to the other in scoring — 16 under at Erin Hills, 1 over at Shinnecock Hills. Bellerive presents a different test. It’s so soft that the average score Saturday was 69.5, and a charge can come from anywhere.

“Not just myself, but everyone’s going to have to shoot low rounds,” Woods said. “It’s soft, it’s gettable, and you can’t just go out there and make a bunch of pars.”

Scott got into the hunt with four birdies in a six-hole stretch on the front, set up by his pure driving and iron play, and limited mistakes with the putter. His only miss was from inside 3 feet for par on the 15th hole, though he answered immediatel­y with a tee shot to 2 feet at the par-3 16th.

As easy as it looks at times, Bellerive can still bite at any moment.

Jordan Spieth found that out on a hole that effectivel­y ended his second bid for the career Grand Slam. From well right of the 12th fairway, he tried to hit through a gap and instead caromed off a tree and out-of-bounds, leading to triple bogey and falling back to 4 under for the tournament. He had to settle for a 69 and was eight shots behind, with 27 players in front of him.

No one paid more dearly than Woodland. Three shots behind at the turn, he and Kevin Kisner were in a front bunker. Woodland went over the green onto a slope at the back of another bunker, and his next shot went through the green back into the first bunker. The sand had yet to be raked, and Woodland’s ball was in his footprints. He wound up with triple bogey, and scrambled to get back in the mix.

“Really confident going into tomorrow with the way I fought the last eight holes,” he said.

Andrew Landry (Arkansas Razorbacks) had a 69 and was 3 under after three rounds. Austin Cook (Jonesboro, Razorbacks) was 2 under after a 69.

 ?? AP/JEFF ROBERSON ?? American Brooks Koepka, shown teeing off on the fourth hole Saturday, shot a 4-under 66 in the third round and leads the PGA Championsh­ip by two strokes over Adam Scott of Australia entering today’s final round.
AP/JEFF ROBERSON American Brooks Koepka, shown teeing off on the fourth hole Saturday, shot a 4-under 66 in the third round and leads the PGA Championsh­ip by two strokes over Adam Scott of Australia entering today’s final round.
 ?? AP/CHARLIE RIEDEL ?? Tiger Woods worked his way into contention Saturday at Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis, firing a 4-under 66. He is four strokes behind the leader.
AP/CHARLIE RIEDEL Tiger Woods worked his way into contention Saturday at Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis, firing a 4-under 66. He is four strokes behind the leader.

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