Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Johnson pulls away, takes lead in Masters

- By Doug Ferguson

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Even without spectators in November, the Masters promised to deliver more drama with 10 players separated by a single shot going into a weekend filled with possibilit­ies.

And then Dustin Johnson turned it into a one-man show.

The world’s top-ranked player looked every bit the part Saturday, racing away from a five-way share of the lead with an explosive start — 4 under through four holes — and never letting up until his 7-under 65 helped him match the 54-hole Masters record.

More importantl­y, Johnson had a four-stroke lead.

Sunday will be the third time Johnson takes a lead into the final round of a major, along with two other majors where he was tied for the lead. His only major was the 2016 U.S. Open when he came from behind. Most recently, he had a one-shot lead at Harding Park in the PGA Championsh­ip this summer, closed with a 68 and lost to a 64 by Collin Morikawa.

This effort was master class. Johnson used putter

from above a slope to the right of the 18th green to 5 feet and holed that for a par to cap off another bogey-free round and reach 16-under 200. That ties the record set by Jordan Spieth in 2015, when he went on to a four-shot victory over Justin Rose and Phil Mickelson.

Not all the players chasing Johnson are as familiar. Two of them are Masters rookies.

South Korean Sungjae Im, who won his first PGA Tour title two weeks before the COVID-19 pandemic shut down golf in the spring, birdied the last hole for 68. Abraham Ancer of Mexico saved par on the 18th for a 69. They were at 12-under 204, along with Cameron Smith of Australia.

Smith opened with 12 pars before running off three straight birdies and scrambling his way home to a 69.

Justin Thomas and Jon Rahm had their chances only to make untimely mistakes. Rahm nearly topped is

second shot on the par-5 eighth and hit his next one off a tree and into the bushes on his way to a double bogey. Thomas sailed his second shot over the 15th green and into the water, making bogey on a par 5 where he was hoping to make up ground.

Both bogeyed the 18th hole. Thomas shot 71, Rahm had a 72.

Asked to describe his day, Rahm didn’t mince words.

“Seriously? How would I describe? Pretty awful,” he said.

Defending champion Tiger Woods will stick around Sunday to present the green jacket, and he’ll have to leave his at Augusta National until he returns.

Woods was 4 under through 10 holes to start the Masters, and he picked up only one more shot over the next 44 holes. He shot 72 and is 11 shots behind.

U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau was more dizzy than sore. He felt so odd on Thursday night that he had another COVID-19 test to be sure — it came back negative — and the betting favorite of this Masters

was in the middle of the pack.

The scoring has been low all week. The 36-hole cut Saturday was at even-par 144, the lowest in Masters history.

Still in front of Johnson is a chance to set the 72-hole record. All he cares about is a green jacket.

“I feel like I’m swing well and I’ve got a lot of confidence in what I’m doing. Everything is going well,” he said. “There’s a lot of really good players right around me. I’m going to have play aggressive when I can and play smart when I can’t.”

He was aggressive at the start. First, he drilled a 5-iron he nearly holed for an albatross on the par-5 second, leaving him a tap-in eagle. He followed that with a lofted pitch to 5 feet for birdie on No. 3, and a 40foot birdie putt up the slope on the par-3 fourth hole as the lead began to grow.

Thomas was within two shots until he made mistakes, and Johnson kept going. Johnson had two-putt birdies on the par 5s on the back nine, and he hasn’t made a bogey since the sixth hole of his second round.

 ?? David J. Phillip The Associated Press ?? Dustin Johnson played the first four holes in 4 under and finished with a 65 to match the 54-hole record low for the Masters.
David J. Phillip The Associated Press Dustin Johnson played the first four holes in 4 under and finished with a 65 to match the 54-hole record low for the Masters.

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