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Jordan Spieth on the 17th green after the resumption of the weather-delayed second round. Day, seeking his seventh title, finished 54 holes on 14-under 202. Image Credit: AFP

Miami: World number one Jason Day battled through horrid putting conditions and a poor start on Saturday to fire a one-over par 73 and lead by four shots after three rounds of the US PGA Players Championship.

Players ripped the greens as all-but unfair as TPC Sawgrass produced only six sub-par scores, matching its all-time low for any round and sparking major complaints from the world’s top golfers.

“I’ve never gone over putts where I’ve had to lag a 10-foot putt and not try to hole it,” Day said. “That’s the first time in my career I’ve had to do that.

“It’s not a lot of fun to have to try and two-putt from 10 feet. I never got really comfortable on the greens at all.”

Third-ranked Rory McIlroy was even harsher, saying, “That was borderline unfair on a few holes. A few pin positions were on crowns. You dribble a putt past the hole and it’s six feet by.”

Day seeking his second wire-to-wire victory of the season and seventh title in 17 starts, finished 54 holes on 14-under 202.

“Some of the pin locations were just a little bit iffy with how the greens were,” Day said. “It’s supposed to be tough I guess. It was a drastic change from Thursday and Friday. I was very shocked.”

Day opened with a 63, matching the 18-hole course record, and completed a weather-hit second round of 66 on Saturday to set a 36-hole record of 15-under 129.

But after going bogey-free through 36 holes for the first time in his career, Day had a bogey and two double bogeys in the first eight holes of round three before fighting back with three birdies the rest of the way.

“I feel good about my game. I have to focus on the positive. I’ve got a 4-stroke lead,” said Day, who has won his past four events when leading after 54 holes.

World number two Jordan Spieth, however, missed the cut, his first event since squandering a back-nine Sunday to lose last month’s Masters.

The 22-year-old American, struggling with his putter, opened on 72 and followed with a 71 to stand on one-under 143, one stroke over the cut line to missing the last 36 holes for the second year in a row at TPC Sawgrass.

“I don’t think there’s much of a connection to the Masters. I just didn’t putt well,” Spieth said. “Augusta seems like a long time ago to me.”

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama, Germany’s Alex Cejka and American Ken Duke shared second on 206 with Italy’s Francesco Molinari on 207. South African Retief Goosen and American Kevin Chappell shot 70 to reach 208.

Matsuyama birdied three holes in a row to open his front and back nines on the way to a 67 while Duke, a back-nine starter, birdied six of his last seven holes to move into the hunt with a shock 65.

Few others were happy as the average score was about 75 on greens that were rock hard and lightning fast.

“I felt like we were putting on dance floors,” said American Billy Horschel after a 75, with Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell calling the green speeds “crazy” and US veteran Jim Furyk dubbing the firm and fast greens “almost impossible to play.”