San Francisco Chronicle

Kisner avoids disaster, leads by 1 shot

- By Doug Ferguson

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Even after his shot bounced high off a concrete bridge over a creek, Kevin Kisner wasn’t in the clear at the PGA Championsh­ip.

His golf ball was buried in thick grass on a hill above the water. As he looked across to the 18th green at Quail Hollow, wondering how he could keep it on the green, a leaderboar­d reminded him of how many players were in the mix at the final major of the year.

Kisner managed to minimize the damage in a calamity-filled final hour Saturday. More importantl­y, he kept the lead.

Two holes after hitting into the water on No. 16 to lose a two-shot lead, Kisner chopped out of the cabbage-like lie to the other side of the 18th green, then navigated a 45-foot putt to close range to escape with bogey and a 1-over-par 72, giving him a one-shot lead over Hideki Matsuyama and Chris Stroud.

“I’m happy I’m in the position I’m in,” Kisner said. “I had a chance to run away from guys and take people out of the tournament that were four or five, six back. And I didn’t do it. Now I’m in a dogfight tomorrow, and I have to be prepared for that.”

If the closing stretch taught

him something, it was to prepare for anything.

Jason Day can attest to that. He wasted a rally with a peculiar decision to hit a shot from behind a tree. His feet slipped on the pine straw and the ball wound up in a waist-high flower bed. What followed was a penalty drop, a shot to the rough, another short of the green and a quadruple-bogey 8 that most likely ended his chances. He shot 77 and was in no mood to discuss the round.

Stroud three-putted the last two holes for bogey, one from off the 17th green. He managed a 71 and was in the final group Sunday, not bad for a guy who wasn’t eligible for the PGA Championsh­ip until he won his first PGA event last Sunday.

“It’s just a dream come true to be here,” he said.

Kisner is in a great spot to pursue his first major championsh­ip. He just doesn’t like what he sees in his rearview mirror, his rivals a lot closer than they once appeared.

Matsuyama made only one birdie and wasted two scoring chances on the back nine. He had a dull finish, which on this day allowed him to make up ground. With five straight pars at the end, he had a 73 and was one shot behind in his bid to deliver Japan its first major.

“I’m disappoint­ed the way I played today,” Matsuyama said. “However, I’m happy to just to be one stroke back.”

Justin Thomas, the son of a PGA profession­al, had the right formula. He didn’t drop a shot over the last 12 shots and shot a 69 to finish just two shots behind along with Louis Oosthuizen, who saved par on the 18th with a bold shot for a 71.

It was everyone else in the hunt that fell apart.

Rickie Fowler, lurking with four birdies in an eight-hole stretch, didn’t birdie the par-5 15th — the easiest at Quail Hollow — and then had a threeputt bogey on the 16th, an 8iron into the water for double bogey on the 17th, and a threeputt bogey on the 18th. That gave him a 73, and after being down three, he trails by six.

Paul Casey also was in position until his shot on 18 missed by a fraction and settled in the rough above the hole. His chip ran off the green, and he made double bogey. Casey played the final three holes in 4 over and shot 74. He was seven behind.

Unlike many of his rivals, Kisner kept it together for much of the day. He was rarely out of position except on the par-5 seventh when he hung a 3-iron to the right and near the hazard. He caught a decent lie and chipped close for his first birdie. And after ending a streak of 25 holes without a bogey, he two-putted the 14th green from 100 feet and two-putted the 15th green from 20 feet, both for birdies, to stretch his lead to two shots as rivals faded.

Kisner joined them with mistakes of his own, though he kept his emotions in check.

“As soon as you think you’re on top of things, it finds a way to kick you right in the face,” Kisner said.

He was speaking about golf. He could have just as easily been talking about the final stretch at Quail Hollow. Doug Ferguson is an Associated Press writer.

 ?? Stuart Franklin / Getty Images ?? Kevin Kisner plays his shot on No. 8 during the third round of the 2017 PGA Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, N.C.
Stuart Franklin / Getty Images Kevin Kisner plays his shot on No. 8 during the third round of the 2017 PGA Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, N.C.

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