The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Matsuyama stealing show

Golf’s hottest player pulls away by 7 after early run by Woods.

- By Doug Ferguson

NASSAU, BAHAMAS — Tiger Woods started with brief run at the lead. Hideki Matsuyama ended Saturday on his way to another victory.

Matsuyama, a winner in three of his past four tournament­s, holed out for eagle on the front nine and kept his mistakes to a minimum for a 7-under 65 to build a seven-shot lead in the Hero World Challenge.

British Open champion Henrik Stenson (66) and U.S. Open winner Dustin Johnson (72) were the closest players to the Japanese star.

Woods was even farther back — 11 shots — though the opening hour was filled with big excitement and raised expectatio­ns. Woods opened with three straight birdies, and then holed out a 40-yard bunker shot on the par-3 fifth hole to get within two shots as Matsuyama was getting started. But it didn’t last.

After an 18-foot birdie putt on the 11th hole to reach 11 under, Woods started missing fairways and dropping shots. And he ended the third round with another tee shot into the water on the 18th hole for a double bogey. He had to settle for a 70 and was in 10th place among 17 players.

Even so, Woods has made 19 birdies in three rounds of his first tournament in 15 months. Asked what he would have thought at the start of the week to hear that he was 8-under par through three rounds, Woods replied, “I’ve had said I’d be pretty far behind. And I’m right.”

Matsuyama was at 19-under 197, matching the 54-hole score by Bubba Watson last year at Albany. A year ago, Watson had a two-shot lead. No one is close to Matsuyama, the hottest player in golf over the past two months.

“I knew somebody was going to go low, but I thought it was going to be probably three, four guys that would post this kind of a score,” Woods said. “But Hideki is just playing unbelievab­le golf.”

Brandt Snedeker (69) and Matt Kuchar (71) were at 11-under 205.

Matsuyama took notice early when he saw Woods make a brief run.

“Only Tiger could take a year-and-a-half off and put up the numbers he’s putting up this week,” he said. “I don’t care how many strokes I’m leading over him, I still worry about him, fear him.”

That was more respect than reality. The winners of golf ’s two oldest major championsh­ips this year don’t sound like they have much of a chance from seven back.

“Anything’s possible, but I’m going to have to shoot a really special round,” Johnson said.

Matsuyama won his first World Golf Championsh­ips title last month in Shanghai at the HSBC Champions, winning by seven shots over Stenson and Daniel Berger.

“That’s exactly what he did at HSBC Champions, and it was not much to do at that time. And possibly, that could be the same tomorrow,” Stenson said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Hideki Matsuyama plays from a greenside bunker on No. 3 during his third round of 7-under 65. The young Japanese star has won three of his past four events.
GETTY IMAGES Hideki Matsuyama plays from a greenside bunker on No. 3 during his third round of 7-under 65. The young Japanese star has won three of his past four events.

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