Thomas drops in an ace for lead
Johnson trails by 1 after three rounds
Justin Thomas hit a 6-iron that one-hopped into the bottom of the cup. Dustin Johnson hit a wedge that never came down from a tree. In one of the 10 fairways that Phil Mickelson missed, a spectator apparently ran off with his golf ball.
Even better than the wild action Saturday in the World Golf Champinsips-Mexico Championship was the promise of more to come.
Thomas, going for his fourth PGA Tour victory of the season, rode a hole in one to a 5-under 66 to take a oneshot lead over Dustin Johnson at Chapultepec Golf Club in Mexico City. Right behind were Mickelson and Rory McIlroy, who saw his momentum stall when his flip wedge on No. 12 struck the pin and spun back.
Such a world-class leade rboard should have been enough to delight the crowd at Chapultepec Golf Club.
It was how they got there that made it so entertaining.
Thomas was lingering around the leaders, trying to piece together a swing, when he was caught between clubs from 239 yards away on the par-3 13th. He hit 6-iron and sent the crowd into delirium when it bounced once and disappeared into the cup.
“It looked perfect,” he said. “I think I said, ‘Go in.’ You might as well say it,” Thomas said while watching the shot on a TV monitor. “I haven’t hit too many shots exactly how I wanted. I liked this result.”
Johnson was tied for the lead when his second shot on the 16th got stuck in a tree. He had no choice but to walk back to the original spot and hit his fourth shot that settled 15 feet from the cup. Just his luck, the ball fell out of the tree as he was walking to the green.
“It happens,” Johnson shrugged after a 66. “I did make a nice putt for bogey, though, so I was definitely happy about that.”
Johnson is happy when he sees any putt fall into the cup. He is swing as beautifully as he did at Riviera two weeks ago when he won by five shots, but missing seven out of 15 putts from inside 7 feet has made him wonder if the greens are conspiring against him.
“If it’s not the greens — someone is playing goalie up by the hole — the trees are catching my ball,” Johnson said.
No one was more wild than Mickelson, who used to thrive on such scrambling skills. This time, he was disappointed. Mickelson thought he had those big misses off the tee out of his system, but they returned in a big way Saturday. He missed seven out of eight fairways in one stretch, and through 12 holes, he had more drops than he had birdies. He still managed a par when the spectator made off with his golf ball. He managed par after taking a drop from a sprinkler into bushes.
He still managed a 68, and was two shots back.
McIlroy was playing in the final group with Mickelson for the first time on a weekend, and his round of 70 was comparatively boring. If anything, he felt he lost a little rhythm waiting on Mickelson to get rulings on three consecutive holes to start the back nine.
Other tournaments
Tshwane Open: Sweden’s Alexander Bjork and Scotland’s Scott Jamieson each shot 3-under 68 to share the third-round lead in Pretoria, South Africa. They were at 13under 200 at Pretoria Country Club. Spain’s Jorge Campillo and South Africa’s Dean Burmester were a stroke back, each shooting 65.
HSBC Women’s Champions: American Michelle Wie shot a 5-under 67 to take a two-stroke lead into the final round in Singapore, with some of the LPGA Tour’s biggest stars right behind her. Wie had a 14-under 202 tota. She’s winless since the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open. Topranked Lydia Ko (67) was tied for second with secondranked Ariya Jutanugarn (69) and Park Sung-Hyun (68). Defending champion Ha Na Jang (68) and Olympic champ Inbee Park (71) were 11 under.