The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rose leads birdie barrage with 64, seizes 1-shot edge

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Justin Rose did his part on another day of low scoring Saturday in the BMW Championsh­ip, running off four straight birdies early for a 6-under 64 and a one-shot lead over Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele.

At stake for Rose is moving to No. 1 in the world for the first time in his career.

Still ahead is a final round at soggy Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pa., that could take more than one day to complete because of rain in the forecast, along with a 13 players within five shots of the lead. The list includes Tiger Woods, who shot 66 and made up no ground on the lead.

“If you shoot 65, you were losing ground,” McIlroy said with only slight exaggerati­on.

Rose made four straight birdies early on the front nine to quickly erase a two-shot deficit to Schauffele, and he finished the front nine birdie-birdie for a 29. Schauffele, hopeful that a victory will give U.S. captain Jim Furyk reason to pick him for the Ryder Cup, stayed with Rose the whole way until he threeputte­d from the tight collar on the 18th hole for a bogey and a 67.

McIlroy picked himself up quickly from a double bogey on the par-3 eighth hole with a 3-wood onto a green so soft on the par-5 ninth that it barely bounced forward and caught a slope down toward the pin, leaving him a short eagle putt.

Three birdies over the last six holes gave him a 63 and a spot in the final group.

The top 30 in the FedEx Cup after the final round advance to East Lake in Atlanta for the Tour Championsh­ip. Bryson DeChambeau already has clinched the No. 1 seed with victories in the opening two playoff events.

The more interestin­g race is at the bottom.

Jordan Spieth salvaged his round late again for a 66, but he still was just outside the top 30. He has never missed the Tour Championsh­ip, and he likely would face some form of penalty from not having added a new tournament to his schedule without competing in at least 25 events. He needs to be at East Lake to reach 25.

Keegan Bradley made two tough pars for a 66 and narrowly edged past Spieth for the 30th spot.

Scoring was the lowest it has been all week at 67.17. Only six players from the 69-man field were over par, and there was a 62 for the third straight round. Tommy Fleetwood has two of them, Friday and Saturday. After opening with a 71, Fleetwood goes into the final round just two shots behind.

So does Rickie Fowler, despite a bogey on the final hole for a 65. Fowler played in the final group at Aronimink in 2011 when it held the AT&T National, though he faded to a tie for 13th. He is trying to win for the first this year.

For Woods, it was another lost opportunit­y, even though he remains in the mix. He opened with two straight birdies and the crowd was on his side, loud as ever. He followed with 11 straight pars, even though he had chances from 15 feet and closer.

A victory should be enough for Rose to reach No. 1 in the world, especially with Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka nine shots out of the lead. Much depends on Justin Thomas, who was only four shots behind.

The question is whether — or when — the fourth round will end. Starting times have been moved up to 7 a.m. today with hopes of having enough time to weather any storm.

European Masters: Defending champion Matthew Fitzpatric­k sank a 40-foot putt for birdie on the 18th to end the third round in Switzerlan­d with a two-shot lead.

The Englishman had five birdies and an eagle in a 7-under 63 for a 14-under total of 196, two ahead of France’s Mike Lorenzo-Vera (64). Doug Ghim, the American former top-ranked amateur, had a 67 to join a fiveman group on 10 under.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Justin Rose ran off four straight birdies early in Saturday’s third round of the BMW Championsh­ip at rain-softened Aronimink Golf Club outside Philadelph­ia.
GETTY IMAGES Justin Rose ran off four straight birdies early in Saturday’s third round of the BMW Championsh­ip at rain-softened Aronimink Golf Club outside Philadelph­ia.

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