Stage for an exciting
finish; 15 players within three shots; Tough day for Indians
Gurgaon, Feb 18: On an exciting third day, generally called
the moving day, it was the dimunitive South Jbe Kruger who stood out with a
fine six-under 66 that carried from overnight tied 16th to sole lead
after three days in the Avantha Masters. He will take a one shot lead into the
final round but a host of players
will fancy their chances at DLF Golf & Country Club, where just three shots
separating the top 15.
The South African looking for his maiden win had two eagles and two birdies in a round of 66, which left him 11-under, one stroke ahead of halfway leader Peter Whiteford, Germany’s Marcel Siem and France’s Jean Baptiste Gonnet.
The South African looking for his maiden win had two eagles and two birdies in a round of 66, which left him 11-under, one stroke ahead of halfway leader Peter Whiteford, Germany’s Marcel Siem and France’s Jean Baptiste Gonnet.
It
was a tough day out there for the Indians, as each of the dozen who made the
cut slid after the third round. Anirban Lahiri (72) was the top Indian in tied
20th, down from overnight seventh, while Shamim Khan (74), who was
also seventh dropped to tied 31st.
Also
at tied 31st were Shiv Kapur (71) and Vijay Kumar (71), who were
both 30th after second day. Jeev Milkha Singh (75) had a sharp fall
from tied 30th to tied 50th where he was joined by Vivek
Bhandari (75), who also came down from overnight 30th.
SSP
Chowrasia (75) came down from tied 43rd to tied 58th the
same as Manav Jaini (75) and Mukesh Kumar (75). Gaurav Pratap Singh, who made
the cut on the line in 54th place was now down to tied 58th.
Himmat
Rai, starting the week in tied fourth, had a tough day with a round of 79 and
he was now way behind in tied 64th place, after having been tied 25th
at the midway stage. Sanjay Kumar, tied 43rd, also dropped to tied
67th after a round of 78.
On a day of fluctuating fortunes, Kruger’s consistency over the third round eventually proved the decisive factor as the 25 year old kept his card bogey free.
The trio, which follows Kruger, had to endure a battle with themselves before coming within one shot of the leader. Siem fought back brilliantly after double bogeys at the first two holes, Whiteford double bogeyed the sixth and 17th – the latter costing him the outright lead – and Gonnet did well to recover from four bogeys in his first 12 holes with a run of five birdies in the last six holes.
Kruger’s first eagle came at the par five sixth when he holed a 20 foot putt, and he was even more impressive at the driveable 15th, holing a putt from off the green after his five wood finished short of the putting surface.
“I’m going to try to play how I played today,” he said. “If it’s meant to be my week, it’ll be mine, so I don’t want to think too far ahead yet. The putts need to go in and I think that’s what defines the winner.”
Asked about his eagles, Kruger added: “I got a little bit lucky on the sixth. I used a six iron and it landed about 20 feet away, and I managed to sink it. That was the longest putt I made today and I was lucky it went in. On the 15th, I just drove it a little short of the green and I made a pretty simple putt from about 12 metres.”
There
were some real low scores as Spaniard Jose Manuel Lara and Tano Goya brought in
64s and three others had 66 each.
Lara bogeyed the third, but then got it back on fourth. He switched gears on
the sixth and had four birdies in a row till tenth. He added further birdies on
12th and 14th and closed again with birdies on 16th
and 17th for a stunning eight-under 64.
Liang
Wen-chong, playing for the first time in India since his Indian Open win in
2008, went out in the first pairing in the morning. He kept it simple with two
birdies and two eagle. He was in position for a third eagle when he went over
the green onto the edge on the 18th. His long downhill putt for
eagle just went past the hole. On the birdie putt, it shaved the edge and he
settled for a par. “Maybe I tried too hard,” he said with a laugh.
Lahiri
said, “It was very disappointing. I made a lot of mistakes today. Hit a couple
of bad shots off the tee. To sum it up, putted badly. I missed a lot of opportunities. I could
have got the momentum early, but I didn’t take my chances.”
He
added, “I fought back well with birdies on the 12th and 13th
and I told myself I should try to get to minus eight. I missed two putts from five, but I hit all greens coming
back. All in all I am still fine, I have kept myself in touch. I just need to
get that putter hot at the start.”
Jeev
said, “I just couldn’t get going. I did have four birdies but the patch between
11th and 14th saw three bogeys and a double bogey that
messed it all up.”
Bhandari,
who was on a song first two days, laughed and said, “Maybe it caught up with
me. I went into the water twice on 17th and finished with a triple.
Till then I was fine at even par. Let’s see there’s one more day and I have
generally played well.”
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