Houston Chronicle Sunday

Woodland keeps hold on lead

Former Kansas high school basketball star carries one-shot lead over Rose into final round

- By Mark Herrmann NEWSDAY

Gary Woodland fires a 69 to take a one-shot lead into today’s final round.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Gary Woodland has transforme­d himself from a small-college basketball player to big-time golfer, from being a skinny kid to a muscular power player, from a poor putter to recently a short-game specialist. Now, he has the chance for the greatest personal migration of all.

On Sunday at the U.S. Open, he can make the quantum leap from solid profession­al to major champion.

With a solid putting performanc­e, Woodland shot 2-underpar 69 in the third round and finished the day at 11-under 202. He is one stroke ahead of Justin Rose, the 2013 U.S. Open winner with whom Woodland will play for a second consecutiv­e day.

Rose shot 68 on another good day for scoring in the tournament that usually does not yield one double-digit under-par mark, let alone two.

“One back gives me the freedom to feel like I've got everything to gain, nothing to lose,” Rose said. “I'm not chasing, really. I'm so close to Gary that I have to go out and play my game tomorrow.”

All of the top eight players on the leader board broke par Saturday. Among those is Brooks Koepka, the reigning two-time U.S. Open champion who shot 68 and is tied for third at 7-under 206 with Louis Oosthuizen and Chez Reavie. Rory McIlroy is one stroke behind them.

Woodland made only one bogey, a five on the eighth hole, several times making clutch putts and a chip in to save par.

“I felt really comfortabl­e today, comfortabl­e with my game,” he said. “I'm excited to be where I am right now.”

The feeling in the air was like that of a football Saturday, cloudy and cool. At the same time, the usually fitful seaside winds were calm enough to make the scoring seem like what you would see in the PGA Tour's relaxed fall season.

In one short burst while the leaders were on the front nine, all of this happened: Koepka just missed an eagle putt on No. 6 and had a tap-in birdie, playing partners Chesson Hadley and Matt Kuchar both eagled that same hole, Kuchar birdied No. 7 to go 8 under, Woodland made a short birdie putt on the fourth and drained an eight-footer on No. 6 to go 11 under.

When will the U.S. Open really start? Maybe the pressure of an Open Sunday will slow everyone in a way that the setup and conditions have not.

“I just enjoy the pressure,” Koepka said. “I enjoy having to hit a good golf shot, making a putt when the pressure is on. If you're within three on the back nine, anything can happen. Hang around all day and see what happens.”

On the back nine Saturday, the top players had their struggles, but wiggled out of them. Woodland hit a shank out of a shaggy bunker lip on No. 12 and sent the ball over the green. Facing bogey, he chipped in from the fringe for par.

“It looked good the whole way,” he said.

Two holes later, his chopped shots on the par 5 left him with a long uphill putt for par, which he made, to stay at 11 under. Each time, Rose was unfazed enough to make birdie to go 9 under.

Woodland, 35, would not have envisioned himself with this kind of opportunit­y when he was a teenager.

He was a basketball phenom at Shawnee Heights High School in Topeka, Kan., leading the team to a state title and dreaming of becoming a Division I shooting guard. But big-time coaches saw him as too small and skinny, so he enrolled at Division II Washburn University. One exhibition game into his freshman season, he decided basketball just wasn't his sport. He was overmatche­d against his favorite school, the University of Kansas.

So, he switched to golf and took the golf scholarshi­p that Kansas had offered earlier. Woodland, like Koepka, worked out relentless­ly and transforme­d himself into a power player on tour.

In fact, it was always his short game that was his admitted Achilles heel. He signed on with English putting guru Phil Kenyon at the British Open last year and now considers the short strokes his strength. Kenyon gave him encouragem­ent after Woodland's tie for eighth last month in the PGA Championsh­ip at Bethpage.

“The PGA was one of the worst weeks I'd had putting, but he told me it was the best he's ever seen my stroke,” Woodland said. “We had a long talk the week after the PGA about learning how to practice, changing some things with the practice and routine, because the stroke itself was really good.”

It has been good enough to lead this U.S. Open in strokes-gained putting. Another day of that could make him a major champion.

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 ?? Harry How / Getty Images ?? Third-round leader Gary Woodland celebrates a par-saving putt on the 12th green Saturday at Pebble Beach. He fired a 2-under 69.
Harry How / Getty Images Third-round leader Gary Woodland celebrates a par-saving putt on the 12th green Saturday at Pebble Beach. He fired a 2-under 69.
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