The Daily Wrap-up, Round 3: Bridgestone Invitational

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Tiger Woods
Franklin/Getty Images
Tiger Woods made six birdies Saturday at Firestone, where he's trying to win for the seventh time in his career.
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Aug. 8, 2009

AKRON, Ohio (AP) -- Padraig Harrington kept pouring in birdies as he tried to separate himself from everyone else at the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational. He arrived at the 18th green with a three-shot lead, happy with his day's work.

Then he glanced at the leaderboard for the first time Saturday.

Suddenly, that lead felt a little smaller.

His closest challenger was Tiger Woods, the world's No. 1 player and close to unbeatable at Firestone.

"I was surprised, yeah. I didn't know he was up there," said Harrington, who make four birdies on the back nine for a 3-under 67. "OK, he's in second place. There he is, 7-under par. There you go, three-shot lead. Is that enough? Probably not. I was trying to put as much room between me and the field. But at the end of the day, there's probably never enough room between you and Tiger.

"I know I have to play well tomorrow if I'm going to win."

Woods made a charge of his own about an hour earlier, running off four birdies over the last six holes, for a 65 that put some life into a dreary afternoon of light rain that slightly softened Firestone.

He has never finished worse than fifth on this track, and Woods has won six times in 10 appearances, three times when trailing.

Of his 69 victories on the PGA TOUR, however, Woods has only won five times when trailing by three shots or more after 54 holes. Two of those came this year, a five-shot deficit at Bay Hill and a four-shot deficit at the Memorial.

But the players he was chasing were not Harrington, a three-time major champion and the last man to beat Woods worldwide when he was atop the leaderboard going into the final round.

And while Harrington conceded that Woods chasing him changes the dynamics, the Irishman usually is up to the task.

"I realize I'm going to have a difficult day, that's for sure," said Harrington, who was at 10-under 200. "This golf course has obviously been very good for Tiger ... so I don't think anything is going to be easy tomorrow. Probably at best, it's going to be a long, hard day and a battle. That's what I'm going to prepare myself for."

Jerry Kelly had a 69 and was five shots behind. Tim Clark, who had a one-shot lead early in the third round, also was five shots behind until he called a two-stroke penalty on himself for not replacing his ball mark on the 16th hole. He wound up with a 73, leaving him at 3 under.

Woods was happy to just have a chance.

He missed a short par putt on the eighth hole and fell six shots behind, with no indication Harrington would back up.

"I figured if I could put half a dent in that, I'd be all right," Woods said. "At least I'm there with a shot at it."

It could be a two-man show, and quite an opening act for the PGA Championship next week at Hazeltine.

Harrington has virtually disappeared this season while searching for the right swing. He only recently found the answer and finally has seen some results. He has a 54-hole lead for the first time since the 2007 Irish Open.

Woods, already a four-time winner this year, is going after his seventh victory at the Bridgestone Invitational and his 16th victory in a World Golf Championship.

It will be the first time Woods and Harrington have played in the final pairing since the 2006 Dunlop Phoenix on the Japan Golf Tour, which featured a rare collapse by the world's No. 1 player. Woods blew a three-shot lead with six holes to play, then lost to Harrington on the second playoff hole.

Harrington also held off a hard-charging Woods at the Target World Challenge seven years ago, a year-end exhibition. Even so, for so many players scarred by losing to the world's No. 1 player, Harrington is among the few with positive recall.

"Obviously, at this stage I know it's going to be a difficult day," he said. "Just the hype of it all, everything about it, it's just going to be a lot of work tomorrow."

The hard work came in the middle of his round, when Harrington failed to take advantage of birdie chances and then had to scramble for par. One great save came with a 6-iron he punched out of the trees and onto the green at No. 9. Another came with a superb chip out of the rough for a tap-in par at the 10th. Pars gave him the momentum to make birdies, and he knocked them in from 30 feet on the 12th, 20 feet on the 13th, and he hit the flag with his tee shot on the 15 for another birdie.

Woods began his run with an approach that spun back to 6 feet on the 13th for birdie, then picked up another birdie from 15 feet on the fringe at the 15th. His experience at Firestone really showed on the par-5 16th, where he faced a tricky shot from 90 yards to a back pin. His lob wedge hit some 8 feet short of the hole, took a hard hop past the hole, then spun back to a foot.

"Every putt I had for birdie, I made it," said Woods, who had only 23 putts. "It was the complete opposite of yesterday."

Harrington is hopeful of one more good round, making it tough for anyone -- Woods included -- to beat him. Then he considered what awaits next week at Hazeltine, and he changed his answer.

"Actually, I'd like five more (good) rounds -- four next week, as well," he said.

The pairings for the PGA Championship were released Friday evening. Harrington and Woods will be in the same group.

Other notables at the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational
Name Score Position Comment Sunday tee time (ET)
Kenny Perry 4 under T4 Playing for the first time since the British Open, Perry moved into contention Saturday with five birdies and just one bogey on his way to a 66. 1:40 p.m.
Lucas Glover 4 under T4 The U.S. Open champion shot his third straight round in the 60s on Saturday with a 68 after hitting 15 of 18 greens in regulation. 1:40 p.m.
Stewart Cink 4 under T4 Playing for the first time since winning the British Open, Cink took just 25 putts on Saturday and shot 68 to remain in contention. 1:30 p.m.
Mike Weir 4 under T4 It was a tale of two nines for Weir, who made three bogeys on the front nine before bouncing back with three birdies on the back nine at Firestone. 1:20 p.m.
Geoff Ogilvy 3 under T14 Three straight birdies to close out a 67 moved Ogilvy up the leaderboard. He is playing for the first time since missing the cut at the British Open. 12:50 p.m.
Saturday's best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 second hole was the easiest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.506.
EAGLES: 2 BIRDIES: 38 PARS: 36
BOGEYS: 3 OTHERS: 0
The par-4 fourth hole was the toughest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.342.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 4 PARS: 45
BOGEYS: 29 OTHERS: 1
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
Tiger Woods stuck his approach shot on the par-5 16th to set up an easy birdie. Watch his shot Tiger Woods matched the low round of the day with four birdies over his last six holes. Check out his scorecard

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH THE PGA TOUR NETWORK
PGA TOUR Network correspondent Brian Katrek offers these observations from Saturday's action. Listen to PGA TOUR Live coverage on XM 146/SIRIUS 209 or right here at PGATOUR.COM.

xmkatrek.jpg

Earlier this week I wrote about that shot Tiger Woods hit on top of the clubhouse here at Firestone a few years ago. Everyone wondered why it was not marked as out of bounds and the best answer was, it just wasn't a frequent enough occurrence to worry about. Probably true, but it almost happened again earlier today. Dustin Johnson hit his tee shot left at No. 9 and tried to play up the 10th fairway. His second shot was headed for that clubhouse when it got caught up in a flower bed. The flower bed had a white line around it. The white line in this case was to indicate a free drop. Johnson made bogey, but it could have been worse.

The PGA TOUR is not often compared to ballet, but when it starts to rain, things get downright artistic. An intricate dance takes place between player and caddy once the wet stuff starts coming down. They go back and forth with the umbrella, extra gloves, the towel, the extra towel, and the clubs and ball, too. The job is simple, keep the player dry. The execution is complex, but fun to watch.

And then, sometimes a player can get through bad weather with sheer brute force and determination. Tiger Woods never put on a drop of rain gear on Saturday. Others were the same way. And then there is JB Holmes, who like Tiger shot 65. JB wears a rain glove all the time.

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