The Daily Wrap-up, Round 3: St. Jude Classic

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If he earns his second win of the season on Sunday, Brian Gay will qualify for the U.S. Open next week.
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Jun. 13, 2009

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The encouragement came at Phil Mickelson as he spent nearly 30 minutes signing autographs for fans after a steamy day that featured 21 holes.

"We're praying for you," one fan offered.

"We're praying for your wife," another said.

And Mickelson, his eyes red, kept signing even as he moved away from a shady tree to take care of people waiting patiently in the baking sun. He didn't escape to the air-conditioned clubhouse until everyone still nearby was satisfied.

It's nothing new for Mickelson, even after a long day where his putter remained balky in shooting a 2-under 68 Saturday. That put him 10 strokes behind Brian Gay -- who can punch his ticket to Bethpage Black and the U.S. Open if he finishes off a wire-to-wire victory Sunday in the St. Jude Classic presented by FedEx.

Gay shot a second consecutive 4-under 66 to keep the lead by a stroke, this time over Bryce Molder (65) after the third round at TPC Southwind.

But it's Mickelson almost everyone is following, the No. 2 player in the Official World Golf Ranking drawing the biggest crowds in only his second visit to TPC Southwind. With this his first event since announcing wife Amy's diagnosis of breast cancer, those fans seem to be trying to will Mickelson to birdies that might distract him from what the couple is dealing with, if even for a moment.

"It's pretty flattering. The people here have been terrific," Mickelson said.

Mickelson started by finishing his last three holes of the second round because storms stopped play Friday, causing damage including a tree partially downed near the 15th hole. He went birdie, bogey and double bogey. Then he had five birdies and three bogeys in the third.

"I haven't putted well the first three days. I feel like I've struck the ball well but have not been able to get it in the hole and shoot a number, a good low number and mostly because of the putter," Mickelson said. "I'll spend sometime on that in the next few days and should be able to get it ironed out for next week."

Gay came into this event among seven who had a chance to earn a trip to Bethpage Black with a win. The man who won Hilton Head by 10 strokes in April insists that wasn't his goal here. He expected to be off next week after he missed qualifying by three strokes and wasn't thinking about the U.S. Open.

"Not till you mention it. Not really. Not when I'm out there, I don't think about it. I mean it's a major. I'd love to play in it. I expected to be off next week ... I've got enough work to do here to not have to worry about that. Nothing I need to think about," Gay said.

Gay was at 14-under 196. Robert Allenby (68) was alone in third at 11 under, Paul Goydos (64) was 10 under, and Woody Austin (68), Heath Slocum (67) and Vaughn Taylor (69) were 9 under.

In this comeback tournament, John Daly made the cut on the line at even par in his first PGA TOUR event in six months. He shot a 68 that had him 1 over.

Mickelson's goal here was to work on his game and sharpen his competitive attitude and steal a few hours respite from the whirlwind of emotions he and his wife have been dealing with over the past month.

He is hitting the ball well. His putter? Well, he needed 33 putts to finish off the second round and 29 in the third. He missed a par-saving putt on No. 18, his ninth hole, as it rolled over the left edge, and he had the perfect line on a 35-footer on No. 9 for birdie that stopped just inches short.

Mickelson said the putter will be the club he focuses on most before the Open begins Thursday. Not that he's finished just yet in Memphis.

"May come out tomorrow and see if I can get a hot putter and shoot something low," he said.

Players were pleasantly surprised at the conditions after rain soaked a course that has seen plenty of rain in recent weeks. That allowed them to attack pins.

"The job that the superintendent and his staff did, and the field staff, getting the golf course ready, pretty remarkable," Goydos said.

Even with officials sending threesomes off both tees in an attempt to get back on schedule, fans still found their way out to watch Mickelson start the third round on No. 10, yelling encouragement to him as he walked up to the tee. He looked relaxed and was smiling.

The fans stayed with Mickelson even with Gay putting on his own show on the other side of the course. He rewarded them with three birdies on his back nine, including a 13-footer he rolled in on No. 8.

It won't be easy to catch Gay.

He has carded only five bogeys this week, and his lone mistake Saturday came on No. 18 when his second shot from a fairway bunker hit the water. With Molder getting his sixth birdie on the same hole, a lead that had been as much as three strokes was trimmed back to one.

Gay had five birdies and was at 15 under, up by as much as three strokes during the round. His putting has been the key as he followed up 23 putts in the second round with 24. Gay has had 73 putts through 54 holes. But Molder and Allenby played almost as well.

"So I was making a comment to my caddy I couldn't get the tee box from like, seemed like nine holes," Gay said.

DIVOTS: Gay will try to become just the fourth in tournament history to win wire-to-wire. Justin Leonard was the last in 2005. This is the fourth time Gay has led or had a share of the 54-hole lead. On tour this year, 16 of 23 leaders or co-leaders after 54 have won. ... Tee times were being moved to Sunday morning with threesomes going off both tees to avoid storms expected Sunday afternoon.

Other notables at the St. Jude Classic
Name Score Position Comment Sunday tee time (ET)
David Toms 8 under T8 Toms has a shot at earning his third win at TPC Southwind, especially after firing his third straight round in the 60s on Saturday. 9:40 a.m.
Rich Beem 7 under T10 He has to make up seven strokes to catch the leader, but Beem would love to capture his first title since the 2002 PGA Championship. 9:30 p.m.
Phil Mickelson 4 under T23 Lefty moved up over 25 spots with a third-round 68, which was two strokes better than his even-par 70 in the second round. 8:20 a.m.
Retief Goosen 4 under T23 Goosen went the wrong direction on moving day when his 1-over 71 dropped him from a tie for 12th into a tie for 23rd. 8:20 a.m.
John Daly 1 over T64 Daly's four bogeys in the third round didn't help improve his position, but he is 12th in the field in driving distance for the week. 9:30 a.m.
Saturday's Best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 16th hole was the easiest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.605.
EAGLES: 1 BIRDIES: 36 PARS: 33
BOGEYS: 4 OTHERS: 2
The par-4 fifth hole was the toughest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.474.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 2 PARS: 40
BOGEYS: 31 OTHERS: 3
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
Jason Day chipped in the par-4 17th hole for his fourth straight birdie, but doubled the last for a 71. Watch his shot Paul Goydos had a bogey-free, 6-under 64 on Saturday that moved him into fourth place. Check out his scorecard

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

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What will Brian Gay take away from the third round on Saturday at the St. Jude Classic? Will it be the five birdies and almost flawless play for 17 holes? Will he focus on the 18th hole, when he made the decision to go for the green from 198 yards out of a fairway bunker then hit a poor shot into the middle of the water hazard? Or will he leave with the memory of a gutsy up and down from 145 yards to save bogey on the final hole after hitting that second shot in the water?

I think the great bogey save will inspire him to be even more aggressive in the final round. He has the confidence to recover if he hits a bad shot. Brian told me sheepishly after the round that he now thinks he should have laid up. He also said that instead of Memphis BBQ on Friday night he needed to go out and grab some Krystal Burgers. "I love Krystals," he stated after the interview. So if you're out in Memphis on Saturday night and you see a guy in flashy golf slacks, go buy him a Krystal burger and maybe get your napkin signed as a souvenir. Why change something that works?

Bryce Molder looked shaken after a bogey at the second hole in the third round. He managed a few more pars but never looked comfortable until the fifth hole. After finding the fairway with his drive, he noticed a lot of mud on his ball. A bad break. He and his caddie, Big E, looked over the shot for a long period of time and Molder hit a great long iron -- with mud and all -- to within 12 feet and rolled in the birdie to get back to even par on the day. From that point on, he looked comfortable and added five more birdies for a 5-under 65 to move within one of the lead. Molder told me after the round that he had felt great on Friday, but on Saturday morning on the practice range things were just not working. He felt like his swing was off. Having the mudball on the fifth was actually a blessing in disguise, as it took his mind off his swing and allowed him to just play golf. Will Molder be able to have a quick start on Sunday now?

Robert Allenby looks so good from tee to green, but his lack of confidence over the putter is simply sad. He gives himself so many chances, and he has great feel from 20 or more feet. It's the close ones that can make you cringe. The putter goes back and you never know if it will come back closed, open or square. Allenby needs to find the right combination with putter and putting teacher before this becomes any more imbedded in his mind. Despite the balky putter, Allenby is only three strokes back and will be playing in the final group on Sunday. Don't count Allenby out -- he's hitting the ball so well from tee to green. And sometimes a few made putts will make the hole look much bigger.

This week's Kodak Challenge hole
HOLE: The par-3, 239-yard 14th at TPC Southwind
LAST YEAR: The 14th played to a stroke average of 3.265, with players recording 36 birdies, 291 pars, 99 bogeys, 25 double bogeys and 2 others.
DESCRIPTION: This hole requires a long iron or wood tee shot. An elevated tee and a full carry over water to a severely undulated green is hard enough, but it's also protected by water on its entire right side. In short, it's a very difficult par 3 set among a natural amphitheater. (Click here for tour)
This week at the Kodak Challenge hole
Round-by-round statistics on the par-3 14th at TPC Southwind
Round Rank Stroke avg. Birdies Pars Bogeys Dbl.bogeys
1 9th 3.077 22 103 28 3
2 1st 3.362 10 94 33 13
3 9th 3.039 17 42 14 3
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