The Denver Post

Thomas scorches course for hot 61

Medinah gets a record performanc­e, with leader up by six shots

- By Doug Ferguson

MEDINAH , ILL . » Justin Thomas opened with five straight birdies, added a pair of eagles and shattered the course record at soft, vulnerable Medinah with an 11-under-par 61 to take a sixshot lead into the final round of the BMW Championsh­ip.

Thomas hit 5-wood to 2 feet for an eagle on No. 10, holed out from 180 yards with an 8-iron on No. 16 and made eight birdies to turn a tight race into a one-man show.

“I felt good about my game for a while, and you don’t know when something like this going to happen,” Thomas said. “We’ve all been talking the last couple of weeks that I’m due to have one, and it’s nice when it happens.”

And just like that, he was already thinking about Sunday.

Thomas was at 21-under 195, six shots clear of Tony Finau (68) and Patrick Cantlay (67). He has a clear path to his first victory in a year, and it would give him the Fedex Cup lead going into the Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake.

The goal for Tiger Woods is simply to get to the Tour Championsh­ip, where last year he ended five years without winning. Woods had a bogey-free 67, his lowest score since the final round of the Memorial.

When Medinah is this much of a pushover, it didn’t help all that much. He was tied for 31st, with some 18 players ahead of where he needs to be to move into the top 30 in the Fedex Cup and advance to East Lake.

“I shoot 60, it should be all right,” Woods said, a tongue-in-cheek comment made about the time Thomas was teeing off.

He had a pair of 12-foot birdie putts, hit to 2 feet on No. 3, holed a 15-footer on No. 4 and was out of position only briefly before a fifth straight birdie on the par-5 fifth. But it was the back nine where Thomas seized control.

First, he drilled a 5-wood that rolled out to 2 feet below the cup. Ordinarily, that might have been his best shot of the day. For this round, it didn’t rate among the top three.

He chipped in for birdie from a fluffy lie behind the 14th green. Understate­d was his pitch to the 15th after driving into the water to save par.

And then, the fireworks on a cloudy, dreary afternoon that featured a rain stoppage of just more than an hour.

From 180 yards, he cut an 8-iron that looked all the way, landed short of the hole and rolled in. Thomas smiled and mentioned, “Brooks Koepka’s money,” to caddie Jimmy Johnson, referring to a wager Thomas has with Koepka on holing shots from over 50 yards ($1,000) and a hole-in-one ($5,000). That put Thomas up $7,000.

With adrenaline running high, he hit 9-iron from a forward tee and a front pin over the water to 6 feet for his last birdie.

Finau holed out from the fourth fairway for eagle. Cantlay had five birdies.

Low scores were everywhere. Medinah never looked more vulnerable. “It doesn’t matter what golf course it is,” Thomas said. “You give us soft, good greens and soft fairways, we’re going to tear it apart. It’s just how it is.”

All but two players in the 69-man field — Harold Varner III and Cameron Champ — were at par or better.

 ?? Sam Greenwood, Getty Images ?? Justin Thomas evaluates a shot Saturday during the third round of the BMW Championsh­ip at Medinah Country Club.
Sam Greenwood, Getty Images Justin Thomas evaluates a shot Saturday during the third round of the BMW Championsh­ip at Medinah Country Club.

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