Miami Herald (Sunday)

Hadley leads by four shots at Palmetto

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Chesson Hadley moved a step closer to his first PGA Tour victory in seven years, opening a four-stroke lead over Harris English and six over Dustin Johnson on Sunday in the rain-delayed Palmetto Championsh­ip at Congaree in Ridgeland, South Carolina.

Hadley, English, Johnson and Tain Lee were all on the 18th hole when the horn sounded to stop play because of lightning. Rain followed about 10 minutes later and officials waited more than two hours for things to clear before telling the players they had to return to finish Sunday morning.

Hadley, in the final group, had just driven into the fairway. English and Lee were preparing to putt. Johnson had yet to hit.

Hadley stands 19 holes away from closing out a surprising week with his second career tour victory after entering this tournament off five consecutiv­e missed cuts.

Hadley surged late with four birdies on a five-hole stretch of the back nine to reach 14-under.

English was 10-under. Johnson, who was tied for the lead early in the round, dropped into a third-place tie with South Africa’s Garrick Higgo at 8-under. Higgo finished with a 68.

Hadley was holding a halfway lead for the first time in PGA Tour career. And paired with world No. 1 Johnson, Hadley seemed poised to fall — especially after his opening drive went left of the fairway and led to bogey. One hole later, Johnson’s birdie had them tied for the top.

But it was Johnson who faltered, looking more like the error-prone ball striker who missed cuts at the Masters and the PGA Championsh­ips the past two months than the one who confidentl­y took control of his home-state Congaree Golf Club in the two opening rounds.

Englishman Tyrrell Hatton, 11th in the world, and Bo Van Pelt were tied for fifth at 7 under. Hatton shot a 68 while Van Pelt had the day’s lowest score at 66.

Hadley, the PGA Tour’s rookie of the year in 2014 whose only victory came that same season, moved back on top with three straight birdies on the 12th, 13th and 14th holes. The last was a perfectly struck putt from 32 feet to separate from the field.

No one could catch up on a hot, steamy South Carolina Saturday, leaving Hadley 18 holes, uh, 19, from his second career tour victory.

Hadley had missed 10 cuts in his last 12 tournament­s and acknowledg­ed he wasn’t sure what to expect at Congaree, filling in for the RBC Canadian Open which was called off due to COVID-19 for a second straight season.

So Hadley went out and shot 11-under 131 his first two rounds — his best start to a PGA Tour event since 2016 and his firstever 36-hole lead on tour.

He found that form again when he needed it most on the back nine to regain the lead after surprise challenger Lee

(more on that later) had birdies on four of the first five holes to move in front at 11-under.

Hadley held firm after his opening bogey before his birdie run left him on top once more.

Lee is a 31-year-old from Columbia, Maryland, who had to qualify last Sunday to make the field for only his third start on the PGA Tour. He was four shots behind Hadley and in the nextto-last group when his early surge took him to the front.

But Lee, whose biggest accomplish­ment may be the NCAA Division III individual title he won in 2013 for ClaremontM­udd-Scripps combined college team, could not maintain his poise during one of the biggest rounds of his career with three bogeys and a double bogey over a five-hole stretch of the back nine.

English may be the most capable of spoiling Chesson’s chances. English has won three times on tour, including this past January at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS

Miguel Angel Jimenez shot a 3-under 69 on Saturday to take a onestroke lead over Fred Couples into the final round of the PGA Tour Champions’ American Insurance Championsh­ip.

Jimenez, also the firstround leader after a 65, had a 10-under 134 at University Ridge in Madison, Wisconsin.

“Not as good a score as yesterday. Still hitting good, hitting some good shots there, a couple upand-downs,” Jimenez said. “A little bit unlucky a couple of times, the ball was in a divot and a little bounce when I made the bogey.”

The 57-year-old Spaniard has 10 victories on the 50-and-over tour after winning 21 times on the European Tour.

“The thing you have to do tomorrow is keep patience, have a good swing rhythm and let everything happen,” Jimenez said.

The 61-year-old Couples followed an opening 68 with a 67. He won the 2017 tournament for the last of his 13 senior titles.

“I felt like I hit the ball pretty well,” Couples said.

Tournament host Steve Stricker was 2-under after a 72.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN Getty Images ?? Chesson Hadley plays his shot from the 13th tee during the third round of the Palmetto Championsh­ip.
MIKE EHRMANN Getty Images Chesson Hadley plays his shot from the 13th tee during the third round of the Palmetto Championsh­ip.

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