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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, June 10, 2007

Steady Scott opens 3-shot St. Jude lead

By Teresa M. Walker
Associated Press

"Three shots is really nothing," said Adam Scott of his lead after three rounds of the Stanford St. Jude Championship in Memphis, Tenn.

Photos by MIKE BROWN | Associated Press

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David Toms blasted out of a bunker en route to a 4-under 66 and was three behind Stanford St. Jude leader Adam Scott.

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Dean Wilson

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Adam Scott wanted to test himself in the pressure of tournament play before the U.S. Open.

The world's fourth-ranked player might wind up being his own best competition.

Scott has put himself in position to head to Oakmont Country Club as a wire-to-wire winner with a three-stroke lead yesterday through three rounds of the Stanford St. Jude Championship, shooting a 2-under 68 at the stingy TPC Southwind course.

The Australian tried to downplay his lead after three straight rounds in the 60s on a 7,239-yard course where no one has shot better than 66.

"Three shots is nothing really," Scott said. "That's a couple-hole turnaround out there. I mean there's plenty of trouble to get in on this golf course. The pins are in quite difficult positions, and they have been every day. If you get out of position, it's hard to get back in.

"Three shots is definitely not a big enough lead as far as I'm concerned. It'd be nice to get off to a good start tomorrow and make it hard for them to catch me."

Scott, the Houston Open winner the week before the Masters, didn't panic when Brian Gay took advantage of his two bogeys and went up by two strokes. He merely focused on hitting fairways and sticking his irons close to the pins, taking his own two-stroke edge in the span of three holes.

"He's playing good," Gay said. "I'll have to shoot three shots lower than him tomorrow."

Scott, who shared the first-round lead with Fredrik Jacobson, had to wait until yesterday morning to see if he remained atop the leaderboard. A three-hour rain delay Friday led to a suspension that left 26 players to finish the second round yesterday.

Only Andrew Buckle, a fellow Aussie, had a chance to catch Scott at the end of the second round, but he double-bogeyed his final hole. That left Scott up by a stroke lead after 36 holes. His third-round 68 gave him a 9-under 201 total.

Two-time Memphis winner David Toms shot a 66 and was 6 under along with Gay (70). Toms will be paired with Scott in the final group today but didn't expect an advantage from fans, even with his long association with this event.

"He's the next superstar if he's not already," Toms said. "He's a nice fellow and good for the game of golf. He'll be tough. Obviously, he's won this year already. He played well last week. He's obviously on a roll right now."

Woody Austin (67) was 5 under, followed by Brian Davis (68) at 4 under. Jacobson (70), Dean Wilson (66), Will MacKenzie (67), Joe Durant (68) and Brandt Snedeker (69) were 207.

Wilson, a former Kane'ohe resident and Castle High alum, started the day tied for 23rd place but is now tied for sixth with a three-round total of 3-under 207 (70-71-66). He went on a birdie streak on the back nine to shoot 34-32. He birdied holes Nos. 3, 11, 12, 15.

Another former Hawai'i resident, Parker McLachlin, shot a 2-over 72 and is tied in 56th place.

McLachlin, a Punahou School alum, rallied for a respectable round.

After making the turn at 1-over 35, McLachlin bogeyed holes Nos. 11, 12, 14 before posting birdies on holes No. 15 and 16. His three-round total is (73-70-72) 215.

BA-CA Open: Richard Green shot a 4-under 67 yesterday for a three-stroke lead after the third round of the BA-CA Open at Oberwaltersdorf, Austria.

The Australian, who hasn't won a tournament since the 1997 Dubai Desert Classic, had four birdies to improve to 15-under 198. Green led Richard McEvoy (64), who started with a bogey but finished with eight birdies for his 201 total. Steven Jeppesen (60) and Miguel Angel Jiminez (69) share third place at 202.

"This course is just perfect for a left-hander like me, especially from the 14th onward," Green said.