Casino Great Tips Radio Ring Tones Video Shop Competitions
 
           
 THE OPEN NEWS
Picture Goosen - round in brilliant 66.

PACK CLOSE IN ON FLAWED TIGER

Bet Now on Golf with totalbet
Click here for full leaderboard
Click here for desktop coverage
Click here for day three report
Click here for day three scores
Clkick here for quotes of the day
Sunday's Tee-Times
Click here for Dave Tindall's Open diary
Click here for latest clubhouse scores
Click for special Open site!

A wind of change came over St Andrews - and it surprisingly blew Tiger Woods back to the chasing pack in the 134th Open championship.

What many thought would be a two-day stroll to victory from four clear at halfway turned into anything but as the world number one battled with the new-look Old Course.

The duel ended in a narrow victory for Woods, who salvaged a great par at the dangerous 17th and then birdied the driveable last for a 71 and 12-under-par total of 204.

But the fight for the claret jug is far from over. Jose Maria Olazabal - not even in the event 18 days ago - is 10 under and Colin Montgomerie's closing 25-foot birdie putt means he and Retief Goosen will resume only three back in joint third place.

Woods remains favourite for what will be his 10th major, but any thought of emulating his eight-shot, record 19-under-par total at the home of golf in 2000 have been sidelined.

He will happily take victory with any score and however it comes.

Woods shocked the 40,000 crowd and millions watching on television around the globe by twice going in gorse on the front nine - and that after three-putting the second.

The advantage was reduced to one and even when he restored it to three it was not plain-sailing over the closing stretch.

Woods went through the green at both the 14th and 16th. He needed to get up and down for birdie at the former and par at the latter, but he did not manage it either time and at the 16th did well not to drop two strokes after leaving his putt well short.

That six-footer was important, but not as much as the 10-foot saving effort on the Road Hole 17th after he had failed to make it onto the green in regulation yet again.

He could easily have three-putted the last from where his drive finished - closer to the first tee than the flag - but he judged the pace and the line extraordinarily well and had the simplest of tap-ins to finish his day's work.

Montgomerie, from slightly further away, never got his first attempt going really. But the second putt made up for that and brought one of the biggest cheers of the day.

Miss it and his dream of a first major title after more than 50 attempts would have looked over. Now there is still a glimmer of a chance and that should bring the fans back in even greater numbers.

Sergio Garcia and Brad Faxon are four back in joint fifth place at eight under and then come US Open champion Michael Campbell and world number two Vijay Singh are seven under.

For a leaderboard you could not ask for much more.

Montgomerie said: "What a day, what a crowd - fantastic. And with a very good round I can win this.

"That putt was important. I hit it as hard as I did the first one and if I can now score 66 tomorrow I have every chance.

"There are a number of players in my position that know they can win. Tiger is not bullet-proof, but that last putt of his was terrific.

"The crowd was fantastic inspiration. Coming up 18 was unbelievable.

"I would not say there is much vulnerability (in Woods), but there is a bit. We had the most difficult conditions, though, and three under between us was reasonable."

Woods countered his outward half problems by reaching the green at the long fifth with two majestic hits two-putting, then making a 22-foot birdie putt at the seventh.

He drove to the edge of the 12th and two-putted to pick up another shot, but the 18th was his only other birdie.

Olazabal, who was set to watch the championship until Seve Ballesteros withdrew, had played with Woods the first two days and finished the second round by holing from the Valley of Sin for a dramatic eagle two.

Today he produced another dramatic moment, a 40-footer up the tier in the green at the driveable 348-yard 12th for a further eagle two.

A brilliant up and down at the last gave the double Masters champion a 68 and he will be paired with Woods again in the last group.

"I've always said I have no problem playing with Tiger," said the 39-year-old Spaniard.

"It might be harder if we were in the States because the crowds are louder and once Tiger has played everybody moves.

"But that's not the case here and that's why I think Open crowds are the best."

Much of the focus, of course, was on how Montgomerie fared paired with Woods after a 66 late on Friday.

Yet to win a major and thrashed by Woods in a head-to-head at the stage of the 1997 Masters - they scored 65 and 74 - the 42-year-old Scot was error-free over the front nine and after making a 10-footer at the fifth he two-putted the ninth.

There was a danger of him slipping too far back when he three-putted the short 11th and drove perilously close to the gorse on the next.

He got out of that with a par, though, and followed with four more before tangling with the Road Hole bunker.

But the disappointment of that bogey was quickly forgotten by the rousing finale.

Goosen had the joint best-of-the-day 66 much earlier and now has the opportunity to prove last month's US Open has left no lasting scars.

The South African looked odds-on for a third win in five years when he took a three-stroke lead into the final day. But he collapsed to an 81.

Garcia's second successive 69 keeps his hopes alive that this could be the week when he ends his wait for a first major, while former American Ryder Cup player Faxon birdied the 16th and 18th to remain in the thick of things a week after he came through final qualifying.

Some other big names fell by the wayside. Ernie Els and Phil Mickelson were playing partners, but failed to inspire each other.

Els took 75 to drop back to level par, Mickelson reached seven under, but then was in gorse at the 12th and followed his bogey with a double bogey on the next and a bogey at the 17th for a 72 for three under.

Collated third-round totals (GB & Ire unless stated, (X) amateur)

204 Tiger Woods (USA) 66 67 71

206 Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 68 70 68

207 Retief Goosen (Rsa) 68 73 66, Colin Montgomerie 71 66 70

208 Sergio Garcia (Spa) 70 69 69, Brad Faxon (USA) 72 66 70

209 Michael Campbell (Aus) 69 72 68, Vijay Singh (Fij) 69 69 71

210 Soren Hansen (Den) 72 72 66, Maarten Lafeber (Ned) 73 70 67, Darren Clarke 73 70 67, Kenny Perry (USA) 71 71 68, Sandy Lyle 74 67 69, Sean O'Hair (USA) 73 67 70, Bernhard Langer (Ger) 71 69 70, Tim Clark (Rsa) 71 69 70, John Daly (USA) 71 69 70, Bart Bryant (USA) 69 70 71, Scott Verplank (USA) 68 70 72

211 Adam Scott (Aus) 70 71 70, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 68 70 73

212 Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 71 74 67, (x) Lloyd Saltman 73 71 68, Bob Tway (USA) 69 71 72, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 72 68 72, Richard Green (Aus) 72 68 72, Bo Van Pelt (USA) 72 67 73, Fred Couples (USA) 68 71 73

213 Tim Herron (USA) 73 72 68, Nicholas Flanagan (Aus) 73 71 69, Mark Hensby (Aus) 67 77 69, Greg Norman (Aus) 72 71 70, Nick Faldo 74 69 70, Ian Poulter 70 72 71, Nick O'Hern (Aus) 73 69 71, Simon Dyson 70 71 72, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 71 70 72, Phil Mickelson (USA) 74 67 72

214 David Smail (Aus) 73 72 69, Scott Drummond 74 71 69, Tadahiro Takayama (Jpn) 72 72 70, Tom Lehman (USA) 75 69 70, Kyoung Ju Choi (Kor) 75 68 71, Steve Webster 71 72 71, Pat Perez (USA) 72 70 72, David Frost (Rsa) 77 65 72, Henrik Stenson (Swe) 74 67 73, (x) Edoardo Molinari (Ita) 70 70 74, Hiroyuki Fujita (Jpn) 72 68 74

215 Tom Watson (USA) 75 70 70, Peter Hanson (Swe) 72 72 71, Chris Dimarco (USA) 75 69 71, Graeme McDowell 69 72 74, Thomas Levet (Fra) 69 71 75, Peter Lonard (Aus) 68 70 77

216 Rod Pampling (Aus) 74 71 71, John Bickerton 75 70 71, S K Ho (Kor) 73 71 72 , Steve Flesch (USA) 74 70 72, Mark Calcavecchia (USA) 70 73 73, Tino Schuster (Ger) 68 74 74, (x) Eric Ramsay 68 74 74, Chris Riley (USA) 68 73 75, Thongchai Jaidee (Tha) 73 68 75, Ernie Els (Rsa) 74 67 75

217 Joe Ogilvie (USA) 74 70 73, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 69 72 76, Simon Khan 69 70 78, Robert Allenby (Aus) 70 68 79

218 Paul McGinley 70 75 73, Paul Lawrie 72 71 75, Luke Donald 68 73 77

219 Justin Leonard (USA) 73 71 75, Robert Rock 73 71 75

220 Scott Gutschewski (USA) 76 69 75

221 Patrik Sjoland (Swe) 74 71 76, (x) Matthew Richardson 75 69 77, Ted Purdy (USA) 72 72 77

223 Duffy Waldorf (USA) 74 68 81

225 Graeme Storm 75 70 80


----------------------------------------------------------------
Part of 365 Media Group

Sports News & Entertainment
Sporting Life | TEAMtalk | Sportal | Football365 | Cricket365
Golf365 | Fixtures365 | Extreme365 | Planet F1 | Planet Rugby | Sky Sports | Football365 ZA

Betting & Gaming
Betting Zone | WSOP |Sky Bet | Poker | Online Casino | Online Bingo | Oddschecker | Casino Checker | Poker Checker | Bingo Checker | Free Bets

Mobile, Fun & Games
Free Online Games | 24-7 Football | Fantasy Football | Fantasy F1
----------------------------------------------------------------

© 2009 365 Media Group Ltd, All Rights Reserved.
Email Your Comments - Advertise With Us - About/Contact Us
Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy - RSS


Features
 Day 4 Action
Full Report
Collated Scores
 
 Day 3 Action
Full Report
Collated Scores
 
 Day 2 Action
Full Report
Collated Scores
 
 Day 1 Action
Full Report
Collated Scores
 
 Greg Norman
Video Exclusive
 
 Phil Mickelson
Audio Interview
 
 Course Video
Holes 1-3
Holes 4-9
 
 Course Video
Holes 10-14
Holes 15-18
Player Profiles