The Palm Beach Post

Will we call him ‘Pat the Champ’?

Reed’s attitude likely to serve him well in final-round showdown.

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AUGUSTA, GA. — It was at Doral four years ago when the world got its first strong dose of Pat the Brat.

All right, so that’s a little harsh, but golf fans do tend to get a little bent out of shape when a young player with the mere beginnings of a reputation starts comparing himself to Tiger Woods.

That’s what Patrick Reed did back in 2014, winning that World Golf Championsh­ip event on Doral’s Blue Monster and wearing a red shirt and black pants, Tiger’s longclaime­d Sunday look, in the final round.

The kid was just 23 back then, mind you, and already had three PGA Tour victories, which stirred Reed that day to proclaim, “I just don’t see a lot of guys that have done that, besides Tiger Woods, of course, and, you know, the other legends of the game.”

Now he’s in the 54-hole lead at the Masters, where legendary charges and collapses are yet another golden tradition. With a 5-under-par 67, one of many hot Saturday scores on the rain-softened course, Reed has put three shots between himself and Rory McIlroy, and

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and it is worth noting that no one, repeat, no one has cobbled four such rounds at any Masters.

If Reed keeps this up he will find this city has more to offer than even the two national championsh­ips he won at Augusta State. Who knew?

Three strokes back was McIlroy, the Northern Irishman with whom Reed did classic battle in the opening Sunday singles match of that ’16 Ryder Cup. Their loud, emotional back-and-forth was the kind of match that almost made golf as good as a contact sport. They started canning putts from the suburbs, one-upping each almost like siblings, shouting themselves hoarse and nearly dislocatin­g shoulders in celebratio­n. It included one four-hole stretch where they were a combined 9 under, before Reed eventually prevailed 1 up.

Where today, Reed will be attempting to win his first major, McIlroy will be looking to add the only major that has eluded him and complete the career Grand Slam. Heavyweigh­t stakes for a heavyweigh­t matchup.

Although neither contestant expects the relatively refined setting of a Masters to compare with the frenzy of a Ryder Cup.

“It will be calmer,” Reed said. “There’s a lot of stuff you can do at a Ryder Cup that you can’t do at Augusta National.”

Granted, there are a few other actors in play. It’s just that you need a good pair of binoculars to see them all.

Continuing the Ryder Cup theme in today’s penultimat­e pairing will be Rickie Fowler — at 9 under and five back of Reed’s lead — and Spain’s Jon Rahm, 8 under. Both matched McIlroy’s 65 Saturday to insert themselves into the conversati­on.

After that, it’s gets a little blurry. Henrik Stenson (70 Saturday) is seven off the lead at 7 under, with Tommy Fleetwood (66), Bubba Watson (68) and Marc Leishman (73) all eight back at 6 under.

The main characters kept trying to tell us today isn’t a match-play Masters.

“It’s completely different,” Reed said. “You’re talking about match play to stroke play and you’re also talking about having Rickie, Jon Rahm, Stenson, Fleetwood and Bubba right behind us. I’m not going to be there focusing on Rory or really focusing on any of those guys. I’m just going to go out and try to play the golf course and try to play some good golf.”

McIlroy massaged the message in a way that might do him a little good on the psychologi­cal gamesmansh­ip front. Just in case his playing partner doesn’t realize it, McIlroy is the proven champion in the pairing, a fourtime major winner. “Patrick has got a three-shot lead. I feel like all the pressure is on him. He’s got to go out and protect that, and he’s got a few guys chasing him that are pretty big-time players. He’s got that to deal with and sleep on tonight,” McIlroy said.

“I feel like I can go out there and play like I’ve got nothing to lose. If I can do that, I feel like I’ll be OK.” Even Saturday, though, took on a mano a mano feel. And when the light rains came, Reed wasn’t above employing a reminder of that kind of golf, unfolding an umbrella from the ’16 Ryder Cup.

Unlike their joust in Minnesota two years ago, Saturday’s was long distance. But about as interactiv­e as could be considerin­g they were in separate pairings.

One group ahead of the leader, McIlroy tied Reed at 9 under with a chip-in eagle on the par-5 eighth hole. The roars told Reed all he needed to know.

He had his answer ready. Within minutes, he birdied the eighth right behind McIlroy, starting a run of three consecutiv­e birdies and confirming an iron grip on the lead. His mindset walking down the eighth fairway was all very practical and profession­al. “The biggest thing is I knew that I was in a good spot to at least make birdie on that hole to try to regain the lead,” Reed said. “But I just know from that situation, I’m sitting in a good situation where I will still have one hole extra to play.

“So, whether he makes birdie or eagle on a hole, I still have that hole to play, and really, it wasn’t as much going up against Rory as it was going out and posting a good number.”

What Reed has done to the par 5s here – which may be illegal in some states – has made all the difference. For the first time this week he failed to birdie a par 5 when he settled for par on No. 2 Saturday. That only seemed to irritate him. All Reed did with the remaining par 5s Saturday was go birdie-eagle-eagle.

There has been this week the hint of sorcery around the Masters. We all knew the people running this show were rich and powerful and have presidents and princes on speed dial. We didn’t know they also had built a Hogwarts Express spur line straight to Magnolia Lane.

Just look at what has materializ­ed already.

The rains forecast to turn the third round of the Masters into gentlemen’s mud wrestling never made good on the threat. The flowers had bloomed on cue this year. The Par 3 Contest was entertaini­ng beyond all proportion. The registers at that new merchandis­e palace were weeping from exhaustion.

And now there came the kind of potentiall­y classic head-to-head between powerful personalit­ies that is often rare as a Sunday final round spreads out over acres of canvas.

Granted, it’s no breakthrou­gh by Tiger Woods (who, by the way shot his best round of the week, a modest 72, Saturday). But you figure the way things have been going this week, something good comes this way today.

If there is one more bit of magic the Masters has left, how about making time speed up, so that last tee time will get here all the quicker?

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? Rory McIlroy celebrates his birdie putt on No. 18 to finish his bogey-free, 7-under 65 in the third round of the Masters on Saturday.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ Rory McIlroy celebrates his birdie putt on No. 18 to finish his bogey-free, 7-under 65 in the third round of the Masters on Saturday.

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