21/11/09 09:10 GMT 
 
 THE OPEN REPORTS
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Bjorn - leads the chasing pack (Getty Images).

Day 3 - Woe For Roe

Mark Roe has the sympathies - millions of them from golf followers all around the world - but Thomas Bjorn has the lead going into the final round of the 132nd Open championship.

Fifteen majors have come and gone since Europe last had a winner, but Bjorn has the opportunity to end that barren spell when he goes out one stroke ahead of American Davis Love at Royal St George's on Sunday afternoon.

It should have been Roe and world number one Tiger Woods playing ahead of them, but in an incident that will be recalled for as long as the 143-year-old tournament is played, Roe was disqualified along with playing partner Jesper Parnevik for forgetting to exchange their scorecards.

The 40-year-old from Sheffield was close to tears after a 67 which would have left him joint third, only two behind, was removed from the record books less than 30 minutes later.

He knows that at this advanced stage of his career the chance may never come again.

But for Bjorn it comes now, after a third-round 69 made him the only player under par after 54 drama-packed holes.

"This is where you want to be. There's no doubt about it and I just hope I can play as well as I did today," said the 32-year-old Dane.

"I really felt comfortable out there and I had a lot of belief in myself. I'm really happy with what I did.

"I felt so solid and hit it well off the tee, which is the key."

He is one under, Love level and Woods joint third with his fellow Americans Kenny Perry and Ben Curtis, Fiji's Vijay Singh and also Spain's Sergio Garcia, whose incredible par at the 17th providing the most electric moment on the course.

Off the course, everybody's hearts went out to Roe - and to Parnevik, of course - because of the strict enforcement of a rule which ruined his hopes of a fairytale victory on Sunday nine years on from his last victory in any event.

Woods, who will play with Singh now, is back as favourite after a 69 of his own in which he provided thrills aplenty for the sun-drenched crowd.

Although his opening round will be remembered for a triple-bogey seven on the first after losing his drive and his second round for four-putting the 12th, he was only four behind at halfway.

From being a face in the rear-view mirror Woods took over at the top in dramatic fashion with two eagles.

The first was routine, a drive and superb iron onto the green at the long fourth and 25-foot putt. The next most definitely was not.

At the 532-yard seventh his approach from the right-hand rough ran across the fairway and curled round into the back of a bunker. Thirty yards from the flag it looked a tough shot just to get it close, but when it hit the flag and dropped in Woods raised both arms into the air in triumph.

He was one under and ahead by one with overnight leader Love three-putting the first - which became two when, following a superb bunker save at the eighth, he rolled in a 30-footer on the ninth to turn in 31.

The back nine was not the fearsome proposition of the first two days, but it is still far tougher than the front and Woods bogeyed the 11th and 13th.

He hit back with another birdie at the 550-yard 14th, but further dropped shots came at the 15th and 17th.

By then, though, Bjorn was the one everyone was trying to catch.

The Dane, joint runner-up to Woods at St Andrews three years ago, beat him in a 72-hole head-to-head in Dubai the following season, but has disappointed since and is determined to put that right.

Returning to Europe's Ryder Cup team last September raised Bjorn's sights again, but he has not won since. This would be some tournament to pick to change that.

Joint second when he resumed, he matched Woods' eagle on the fourth and after bogeying the short sixth achieved the expected birdie on the easily reachable next.

As others had their adventures good and bad Bjorn went on a run of pars, every one of them an achievement not just because of the difficulty of the course, but also the pressure of the situation he had placed himself in.

Woods' problems had made him outright leader as he entered the gruelling closing stretch and he was able to handle it.

This was the third round, not the last one, though. Tomorrow is the ultimate test, of course.

Garcia, back playing well after undergoing swing changes at the start of the year, is also enjoying himself again - and what happened on the 17th brought more than smile.

The 23-year-old, like Bjorn chasing his first major, had driven into thick rough left of the fairway.

He must have thought about taking a penalty drop, but decided to thrash at it and not only failed to extricate the ball he lost it right in front of him.

To his immense relief it was found and after hacking his third shot at the hole out into the clear his pitch for par landed at the front of the green, rolled up to the flag and dropped just as Woods's had at the seventh.

A huge roar went up, of course, and Garcia was overjoyed.

There is more work to be done yet, however, and the title is still wide open.

Welshman Phillip Price, first and second on his last two starts, moved quietly to two over with a 69 and is therefore only three back along with South Korean SK Ho. Now there would be a shock champion.

Gary Evans, who missed last year's play-off by only one, is on three over along with Swedes Pierre Fulke and Fredrik Jacobson and Australian Peter Lonard.

Nick Faldo - one day after his 46th birthday - is only five behind following a 67 that, because of the lengthening of some holes, counts as a course record just as his second 63 in 1993 did.

But defending champion Ernie Els might just have too much to do at five over after a 72 containing a double-bogey seven on the 14th, where he drove out of bounds.

The final-day action should be riveting, but what a pity that Roe is not part of it.

Collated scores (Gbr & Irl unless stated, Par 71, (x) denotes amateur):

212 Thomas Bjorn (Den) 73 70 69

213 Davis Love III (USA) 69 72 72

214 Tiger Woods (USA) 73 72 69, Vijay Singh (Fij) 75 70 69, Kenny Perry (USA) 74 70 70, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 73 71 70, Ben Curtis (USA) 72 72 70

215 Phillip Price 74 72 69, SK Ho (Kor) 70 73 72

216 Pierre Fulke (Swe) 77 72 67, Gary Evans 71 75 70, Peter Lonard (Aus) 73 73 70, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 70 76 70

217 Nick Faldo 76 74 67, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 75 71 71, Fred Couples (USA) 71 75 71, Chad Campbell (USA) 74 71 72

218 Brian Davis 77 73 68, Angel Cabrera (Arg) 75 73 70, Mathew Goggin (Aus) 76 72 70, Mark Foster 73 73 72, Ernie Els (Rsa) 78 68 72, Nick Price (Zim) 74 72 72, Mathias Gronberg (Swe) 71 74 73, Scott McCarron (USA) 71 74 73, Thomas Levet (Fra) 71 73 74

219 Paul McGinley 77 73 69, Retief Goosen (Rsa) 73 75 71, Jose Coceres (Arg) 77 70 72, Andrew Oldcorn 72 74 73, Phil Mickelson (USA) 74 72 73, Marco Ruiz (Par) 73 71 75, Hennie Otto (Rsa) 68 76 75

220 Peter Fowler (Aus) 77 73 70, Ian Poulter 78 72 70, Brad Faxon (USA) 77 73 70, Tom Byrum (USA) 77 72 71, Duffy Waldorf (USA) 76 73 71, David Lynn 73 76 71, Anthony Wall 75 74 71, Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 77 71 72, JL Lewis (USA) 78 70 72, Gary Murphy 73 74 73

221 Mike Weir (Can) 74 76 71, Darren Clarke 75 75 71, KJ Choi (Kor) 77 72 72, Tom Watson (USA) 71 77 73, Markus Brier (Aut) 76 71 74

222 Tom Lehman (USA) 77 73 72, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 77 73 72, Skip Kendall (USA) 73 76 73, Shingo Katayama (Jpn) 76 73 73, Padraig Harrington 75 73 74, Greg Norman (Aus) 69 79 74, Robert Allenby (Aus) 73 75 74, Craig Parry (Aus) 73 73 76, Alastair Forsyth 74 70 78

223 Len Mattiace (USA) 74 75 74, John Daly (USA) 75 74 74, Chris Smith (USA) 74 73 76

224 Michael Campbell (Nzl) 78 72 74, Katsuyoshi Tomori (Jpn) 72 77 75, Adam Mednick (Swe) 76 72 76, Bob Estes (USA) 77 71 76, Charles Howell III (USA) 71 76 77

225 Rory Sabbatini (Rsa) 79 71 75, Stewart Cink (USA) 75 75 75, Rich Beem (USA) 76 74 75

226 John Rollins (USA) 72 76 78

227 Mark O'Meara (USA) 73 77 77, Mark McNulty (Zim) 79 71 77

228 Stephen Leaney (Aus) 74 76 78, Ian Woosnam 73 75 80

Disq Mark Roe, Jesper Parnevik



Reports
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Scores
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Past Opens
2002 Els Play-off Joy
2001 Duval Delight
2000 Tiger Triumphant
1999 Great Scot Lawrie
1998 O'Meara Makes Mark
1997 Leonard Lords It
1996 Tom Takes Title
1995 All Hail Daly
1994 Price Is Right
1993 Stormin' Norman
Profiles
Tiger Woods
Ernie Els
Mike Weir
Jim Furyk
Vijay Singh
Davis Love
David Toms
Phil Mickelson
Padraig Harrington
Nick Price
Kenny Perry
Retief Goosen
Justin Leonard
Chris DiMarco
Sergio Garcia
Rich Beem
Colin Montgomerie
Darren Clarke
Justin Rose
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