San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

HATTON RETAINS LEAD ON BRUTAL DAY

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

The calendar and palm trees suggested the Florida swing in March.

The severity of the test Saturday at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al in Orlando, Fla. — wind, cool air, thick rough, brick-hard greens, a few tucked pins — made it feel more like the U.S. Open in June.

No one broke 70. Only one player broke par. That was Max Homa, who finished an hour before the leaders started. Brooks Koepka had an 81, the highest score of his PGA Tour career.

Tyrrell Hatton ended the most brutal day at Bay Hill in 37 years with a 30-foot birdie putt on the final hole, and he thrust his arm in the air without really knowing why.

“I don’t normally fist pump on a Saturday,” Hatton said after his hardearned round of 1-over 73. “I think it was more shock that the ball actually went in the hole. And very relieved.”

He might have been happy to have survived, or that gravity that pulled the ball into the cup kept it from rolling another 8 feet, or that it gave him a two-shot lead over Rory Mcilroy and Marc Leishman.

“I don’t think anyone enjoyed that today,” he said with a laugh. “It was just so hard.”

Mcilroy was happy with his run of 13 straight pars, delighted to make his first birdie on the par-5 16th and not terribly bothered by a bogey on the final hole for a 73. His goal was to survive, and he managed that.

“I saw some of the scores this morning and saw it was tough, but I guess I thought

I could still go out there and shoot something sub-70,” Mcilroy said. “And then once I got out there I was like, ‘Oh, maybe not.’ ”

Leishman has rarely been more thrilled with a round at even par — two bogeys, two birdies, 14 pars. He had to make sure that’s what he scored.

“I actually added my score up and kind of did a double-take,” Leishman said. “It added up to 72 and it felt like I shot 65. So yeah, it was really tough. The greens were firm, fast. It was exactly how you wanted the golf course to play, really. Par was a great score, and hopefully I can play like that again tomorrow.”

Hatton had a wild ride at the end as temperatur­es felt like the mid-50s with the wind. He had one par over his final five holes — birdieboge­y-bogey-birdie-par — before his big birdie at the end.

He was was at 6-under 210, the highest 54-hole score to lead at Bay Hill since Ben Crenshaw in 1993.

Homa made the cut on the number and played early — no advantage on this day with wind and cold air that felt more like California during the West Coast Swing — and made double bogey on the 18th hole that ruined a tremendous round. He had to settle for 70. By the end of the day, it was the only score under par.

The average score was 75.91, the highest for any round at Bay Hill since it was 76.29 in the second round in 1983. It was the highest round at Bay Hill after the cut since it was 78.84 in the final round of 1980. That also was the last time no one broke 70.

Palmer loved a hard test and surely would have given this day a thumbs-up.

Elsewhere

Ernie Els took the second-round lead in the PGA Tour Champions’ Hoag Classic, eagling the par-5 15th and birdieing the final two holes for a 7-under 64.

Making his third senior start, the 50-year-old Hall of Famer from South Africa rebounded from a bogey on the par-4 14th with the strong finish to reach 12under 130 at Newport Beach Country Club.

Els lost a playoff to Miguel Angel Jimenez in his debut in the season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championsh­ip in Hawaii, then tied for 34th last week in the Cologuard Classic in Arizona.

• After sharing the lead overnight, Jorge Campillo has a one-shot lead over Jeff Winther and David Drysdale going into the final day of the Qatar Masters.

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK AP ?? Tyrrell Hatton celebrates after sinking a 30-foot putt for birdie on the 18th green during the third round.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK AP Tyrrell Hatton celebrates after sinking a 30-foot putt for birdie on the 18th green during the third round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States