AUGUSTA, United States: Justin Rose carried a one-stroke lead into Saturday’s third round of the Masters with major winners Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas on his heels and thunderstorms in the forecast.
Play began with light winds and overcast morning skies at Augusta National with Rose teeing off at 2:20 pm (1820 GMT) in the final group alongside American Will Zalatoris.
“Day three plays pretty difficult here at Augusta National,” Rose said. “You just have to keep hitting the shots.”
The 40-year-old Englishman is trying to become the sixth wire-to-wire Masters champion after Americans Craig Wood (1941), Arnold Palmer (1960), Jack Nicklaus (1972), Ray Floyd (1976) and Spieth (2015).
Rose, twice a Masters runner-up, won his only major title at the 2013 US Open. He has led or shared the Masters lead after seven career rounds, the most of any player never to win a green jacket.
World number 41 Rose could become the first Englishman to win both the US Open and Masters and join Ben Hogan as the only players to win majors at Merion and Augusta.
Rose opened with a seven-under par 65 in firm and fast conditions and struggled to a 72 on Friday to stand on seven-under 137 after 36 holes, one stroke ahead of Zalatoris and Brian Harman with Spieth and Australian Mrc Leishman two adrift and Thomas in a pack three back.
“You can see the leaderboard and who is stacking up behind,” Rose said. “I feel like there’s a lot of firepower there.”
Thomas, the 2017 PGA Championship winner, will overtake Dustin Johnson to become world number one if he wins the green jacket after defending champion Johnson missed the cut.
“I definitely have left a lot of shots out there the last two days,” Thomas said. “But I’m in a great position.”
Three-time major winner Spieth leads greens reached in regulation with 30 of 36, two better than Rose and Thomas, and snapped a four-year win drought last week in San Antonio.
Only twice since 1960 has a player won the Masters the week after a US PGA Tour victory — US left-hander Phil Mickelson in 2006 after a triumph in Atlanta and Scotland’s Sandy Lyle, who won at Greensboro the week before taking the 1988 Masters.
Spieth had not won since capturing the Claret Jug at the 2017 British Open at Royal Birkdale until the Texas Open, but likes the slow and steady improvement he sees in his game and wants to see Augusta National at its most formidable.
“I’m happy that the golf course has the opportunity to play more and more difficult over the weekend,” Spieth said. “I’m looking forward to that kind of challenge, and I think that could be an advantage to me if I’m in control of the ball.”
It might not happen. Thunderstorms are predicted for late afternoon, when the final groups will be on the back nine, and could soften the lightning-fast layout.
Not since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979 has a player won the Masters in his debut, but that’s the feat Zalatoris hopes to achieve at age 24.
“The joke I’ve been saying with my family is if I’m stupid enough to think I can play here, then I’m stupid enough to think I can win it,” Zalatoris said. — AFP
Second-round scores in the 85th Masters (USA unless noted, a-denotes amateur, par-72):
137 - Justin Rose (ENG) 65-72
138 - Will Zalatoris 70-68, Brian Harman 69-69
139 - Marc Leishman (AUS) 72-67, Jordan Spieth 71-68
140 - Bernd Wiesberger 74-66, Tony Finau 74-66, Justin Thomas 73-67, Kim Si-woo (KOR) 71-69, Cameron Champ 72-68, Hideki Matsuyama (JPN) 69-71
141 - Xander Schauffele 72-69
142 - Ryan Palmer 74-68, Collin Morikawa 73-69, Cameron Smith (AUS) 74-68, Corey Conners (CAN) 73-69
143 - Bryson DeChambeau 76-67, Matt Jones (AUS) 74-69, Stewart Cink 74-69, Viktor Hovland (NOR) 73-70
144 - Mackenzie Hughes (CAN) 72-72, Robert MacIntyre (SCO) 74-70, Shane Lowry (IRL) 71-73, Tommy Fleetwood (ENG) 74-70, Matthew Fitzpatrick (ENG) 74-70, Michael Thompson 72-72, Henrik Stenson (SWE) 73-71, Brendon Todd 73-71, Abraham Ancer (MEX) 75-69, Bubba Watson 74-70, Jon Rahm (ESP) 72-72
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