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Golf in UAE World

PGA: Horschel, Gooch share the lead on a brutal day at Arnold Palmer Invitational

In toughest conditions of the year, Horschel and Gooch up to the task at Bay Hill



Billy Horschel in action during the third round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational
Image Credit: AFP

No lead was safe Saturday at Bay Hill. No one ever felt comfortable until they were finished. In the toughest conditions of the year, Billy Horschel and Talor Gooch were up to the task at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Horschel got a good break on a day where those were hard to find, turning a tough par into an unlikely birdie on the 18th hole for a one-under 71. That gave him a share of the lead with Gooch, who made his only bogey on the back nine at the last hole for a 72.

They still managed to find some semblance of pleasure in the test Bay Hill offered with its strong wind and greens with so little grass from being baked by the sun, making it hard to predict how putts would roll — or glide, in this case.

This is supposed to be the March run on the way to the Masters. It felt more like mid-June and a traditional US Open.

“It’s a grind, but I think we don’t get this enough on the PGA Tour,” Gooch said. “So I think that’s part of why we like it when we do get it. It’s nice to not have a week of a birdie fest. And you’ve got to be playing your best golf to have a chance. You can’t fake it at all.”

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It was a grind, all right.

Viktor Hovland lost a four-shot lead at the turn, shot 40 on the back nine for a 75 and went from control of the tournament to one-shot behind in a matter of two hours. Rory McIlroy was making his move until a tee shot out-of-bounds on the 15th led to double bogey.

Matt Jones had enough of his putter on the 11th hole and heaved the club into a lake.

Horschel’s runner from the left rough raced through the length of the 18th green and into the rough, buried. The chip was scary fast. But his foot was on a sprinkler, and the free drop allowed him to move it to the collar. Instead of a dicey chip, he used putter for a 30-footer that trickled into the cup for one of only seven birdies on the day.

“To make that putt on 18, to shoot one-under on a really tough day is really satisfying,” he said.

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Scottie Scheffler managed to make a charge. After missing three straight par putts from six feet or closer to cap off his front nine, Scheffler made three birdies and a 20-foot eagle for a 31 on the back for a 68, matching the low score of the day.

He started the day eight shots behind. He ended it two shots off the lead. The final group was making the turn when Scheffler finished and he was asked if his round put him back into the tournament.

“I didn’t really feel out of it at the beginning of the day,” Scheffler said.

Gooch, the Oklahoman who won his first PGA Tour title in the final event of last year, made a 35-foot birdie on the tough 15th, followed with a 15-foot birdie on the next hole and was in the lead until a tee shot into ankle-deep rough on the final hole kept him from reaching the green.

Gooch and Horschel were at seven-under 209.

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Former US Open champion Gary Woodland overcame three bogeys for a round of 70 and was three shots behind, followed by the group of Chris Kirk (68), Graeme McDowell (69) and McIlroy, whose 76 could have been worse.

“I feel like I’ve never had as many 6-footers for bogeys as I’ve had today,” he said.

McIlroy, the 18-hole leader, ran off back-to-back birdies early on the back nine and was making up ground until he lost a tee shot to the right on the 15th hole that bounced into a backyard. That led to double bogey, and he bogeyed the last two holes to fall back.

“It’s so tough out there. It’s so tricky. It’s just on knife’s edge,” McIlroy said. “You’re literally talking like feet — two feet here, two feet there from 200 yards can make a huge difference in where the ball ends up.”

Jones, meanwhile, hit a brilliant approach on the 11th hole to eight feet only to have the putt slide offline. He reached the cup about the time the golf ball trickled there, tapped in with one hand and then heaved his putter into the lake.

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