Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Harman takes lead at Travelers Championsh­ip

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CROMWELL, Conn. — Brian Harman has always looked up to Bubba Watson, who preceded him as a standout left-hander for the University of Georgia Bulldogs.

On Sunday, Watson will begin the day looking up the leaderboar­d at Harmon as the two begin play in the final round of the Travelers Championsh­ip.

Harman birdied the 18th hole for his second consecutiv­e 5-under 65 and a onestroke lead over Watson and Canadian Graham DeLaet on Saturday in the Travelers Championsh­ip.

Looking for his second PGA Tour victory, Harman had a bogey-free round to take a 14-under196 total into the final round at TPC River Highlands.

Harman hit a 149-yard wedge to 4 feet on the par-4 18th. He sank the putt after Watson, who led by two strokes after the each of the first two rounds, missed a 17-footer.

“Bubba’s a lot of fun to play golf with,” Harman said. “He was a little before me at Georgia, so I always looked up to him, was always really proud of the way he was doing and we were always rooting for him at Georgia.”

This is the second 54-hole lead for Harmon, who won the 2014 John Deere Classic from the front on the final day.

“He’s a solid player,” Watson said. “It sounds funny saying this, but he’s like a little bulldog.”

Watson shot a 68 in a light rain after opening with a tournament-best 62 on Thursday and adding a 67 in the second round.

He needed a bit of luck Saturday after his tee shot on the par-4 15th hole went left and into the woods. He got a fortuitous bounce high off a tree trunk and the ball dropped back over the gallery and into the fairway bunker. He was able to save par from there.

“It hit the tree and everybody roared,” he said. “I had to ask the camera guy, and he said it was in the bunker.”

DeLaet, playing on wife Ruby’s birthday, had five birdies and grabbed a share of the lead with an eagle on the 15th, putting his drive within 6 feet of the pin.

He had a chance to move to 14 under, but left an 18-foot birdie putt on 18th just short.

DeLaet was in a threeway tie for first place with Watson entering the final round two years ago before finishing third. He has never won on the PGA Tour, and had back surgery for a pinched nerve in 2011, a problem that he says still bothers him.

“The last couple months I’ve been moving really well and feeling a lot better,” He said. “My golf game is coming around too, which is nice.”

Brandt Snedeker, Paul Casey and Zach Johnson were 11 under. Snedeker had a 63 to match the best round of the day, and Casey and Johnson shot 64. Bernhard Langer and Jeff Maggert shared the lead over a bunched field heading into the final round of the U.S. Senior Open in Sacramento, Calif.

Langer shot a 2-under 68, and Maggert had a 70. They were at 5-under 205 for the championsh­ip at Del Paso, where conditions cooled off after consecutiv­e days above 100 degrees.

But the competitio­n remained hot, with eight players within a shot of the lead. That includes Tom Watson, Kenny Perry and defending champion Colin Montgomeri­e.

The 65-year-old Watson, who was tied with Maggert and Peter Fowler through 36 holes, salvaged after a tough round with a 71. Perry shot a 64 to surge into contention, and Montgomeri­e had a 70.

Langer is coming off a major victory June 14 in the Senior Players Championsh­ip in Massachuse­tts. Maggert won the Regions Tradition in May in Alabama for his first major title.

England’s James Morrison shot a 5-under 67 to take a two-stroke lead after the third round of the BMW Internatio­nal Open in Munich.

Morrison had a 16-under 200 total at Munich Eichenried. England’s Chris Paisley was second after a 66.

 ?? JIM ROGASH/GETTY IMAGES ?? Brian Harman holds up his ball after finishing on the 18th green during the third round Saturday.
JIM ROGASH/GETTY IMAGES Brian Harman holds up his ball after finishing on the 18th green during the third round Saturday.

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