Boston Sunday Globe

Power and Griffin share Bermuda lead

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Seamus Power knows the wind and Port Royal well enough to realize he’d better do his scoring early. He did just that Saturday, added a few birdies late, and had another 6-under-par 65 to share the lead with Ben Griffin in the Butterfiel­d Bermuda Championsh­ip.

Power holed a 30-foot birdie putt on the daunting par-3 16th and made a 12-foot birdie on the par-5 17th to atone for his lone mistake, a double bogey on the par-3 13th.

Griffin followed the same script in a strong wind with three birdies to open his round. He kept his approach under the wind on the 18th to 5 feet for birdie and a 66.

They were at 18-under 195, two shots clear of Kevin Yu (67) and Aaron Baddeley (68).

Power, at No. 48, is the highestran­ked player at Port Royal.

Power has one PGA Tour victory, the Barbasol Championsh­ip in Kentucky last year. He would love nothing more than a win for a strong early start to the PGA Tour and to assure his spot in the Masters.

For Griffin, even more is at stake. He gave up on the game a few years ago and was working as a loan mortgage officer when he was inspired playing in a member-guest, and the members put up money for him to Monday qualify into a Korn Ferry Tour event.

That was the start of baby steps — making it through Korn Ferry Tour qualifying, and then last year earning his full card onto the PGA Tour.

A victory Sunday comes with a twoyear exemption.

“It’s been surreal really the last year and two months of just being comfortabl­e on the golf course and just going out and trying to win,” Griffin said. “When you’re playing mini-tour events and you’re trying to grind for top 10 just to break even, just have enough money to maybe do a Monday qualifier, it’s not necessaril­y the easiest in terms.

“Now that I have this little bit of freedom, I can go out there and just try to win golf tournament­s.”

LIV Golf — Dustin Johnson’s season of big money will finish with another seven-figure check.

Johnson and his 4Aces GC team are one of four squads that will play in the finals of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf team championsh­ip Sunday, with $16 million — $4 million for each of the four players — awaiting the winning roster in the season-ending event at Trump National Doral.

Johnson’s team got there by beating Cleeks GC, 2-1, on Saturday, with the winning point coming when Pat Perez and Talor Gooch held off Graeme McDowell and Richard Bland in extra holes.

“For us, it’s all about the competitio­n,” Johnson said. “We want to win the first championsh­ip in LIV Golf. It’s anybody’s ballgame. Every team up here obviously is playing well. There’s no favorites in my eyes.”

Also headed to the final: Cameron Smith and Punch GC, which topped Sergio Garcia and Firebirds GC, 2-1; the Louis Oosthuizen-captained Stinger GC, which won when Oosthuizen beat Bryson DeChambeau in 23 holes to seal a 2-1 win over Crusher GC; and the Brooks Koepka-captained Smash GC, which beat Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, and Majesticks GC, 3-0. European — Jordan Smith will take a two-shot lead into the final round of the Portugal Masters after staying atop the leaderboar­d for a third straight day. The Englishman shot 9-under 62 after eagling the par-4 15th hole and making eight birdies to go with a sole bogey.

 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Co-leader Seamus Power of Ireland is the highest-ranked player in the field at the Butterfiel­d Bermuda Championsh­ip (48th).
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES Co-leader Seamus Power of Ireland is the highest-ranked player in the field at the Butterfiel­d Bermuda Championsh­ip (48th).

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