Furyk - leads by three. (Getty Images)
FURYK THREE CLEAR AS WOODS FADES
By Mark Garrod, PA Sport Golf Correspondent, Chicago
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Tiger Woods' grip on his one remaining major is hanging by a thread after a
day he will want to forget at Olympia Fields near Chicago.
In the lowest-scoring United States Open in history Woods had his highest
score as a professional in the event - a five-over-par 75 that dropped him from
three behind to 11 adrift and from fifth place to 24th.
Jim Furyk now leads at 10 under par, breaking the championship record 54-hole
total by three when he finished with a 30-foot putt for a 67.
During the round - three times, in fact - Furyk also became just the third
player in US Open history to reach 10 under.
Australian Stephen Leaney, a European tour regular, lies second, thanks in
part to three closing bogeys from Vijay Singh 24 hours after he shot a major
championship record-equalling 63.
Those mistakes sent Singh down into a tie for third with Nick Price on five
under.
It started going wrong for Woods when he was put off by an ill-timed whistle
from a spectator on his second shot to the long first hole. He dropped his club
and stared long and hard in their direction.
"It was frustrating," he said. "It came on my downswing, which made it
worse. If it was my backswing I could have stopped."
There were no repeats of that, but Woods had enough problems reading the speed
of the green.
"They looked faster, but putted slower and I made nothing," he commented.
"Now I need to shoot a great round and get some help from the leaders. But you
never know."
What he does know is that none of his eight major victories have come from
behind on the last day - let alone 11 shots back.
With his Masters defence a big disappointment too (he was 15th) and no wins
since March the inevitable word "slump" was raised.
"I have won three out of seven events this year and you are trying to tell me
I am in a slump," he responded, laughing off the suggestion.
Chances of a European success - their first since Tony Jacklin in 1970 - were
about as bright as Woods'. Swede Fredrik Jacobson is best placed, but he is
joint 15th at one under following a 73.
Darren Clarke and Justin Rose both stand one over alongside Woods, Padraig
Harrington is three over, Colin Montgomerie one further back and Brian Davis,
like Rose making his debut, seven over.
Clarke did reach three under, but after failing to sustain that and bogeying
the last two holes he said: "You can't get it done with 34 putts.
"I didn't play as well as the first two days, but I gave myself more chances
- very strange.
"But I didn't make anything and I think tomorrow I will close my eyes and hit
it.
"I had my opportunities to be right in the thick of things. I ought to be an
awful lot better than I am, but once again I have not taken the chances I have
made."
Price threatened to be the story of the day when he birdied five of the first
six holes to take over at the top. But he then had four bogeys in six.
Singh and Furyk were joint halfway leaders and Singh struck first with a
six-footer on the long first.
But Furyk birdied the fifth to get back on terms with him and then both
birdied the 555-yard sixth by getting up and down from greenside bunkers.
Then came Furyk's superlative iron to five feet on the 496-yard par-four
ninth, which took him to 10 under for the first time, joining Gil Morgan and
Woods as the only three to reach double digits.
Woods went on to win by 15 when he achieved the feat at Pebble Beach three
years ago, but Morgan closed 77-81 on the same course in 1992 and was only joint
13th.
Furyk, chasing his first major, then bogeyed the 10th to fall back alongside
Singh, but the former Masters and US PGA champion was the one to crumble on the
homeward stretch.
First he bogeyed the 12th, then Furyk made a 40-footer on the short 15th. And
at the 16th he got up and down from sand while his playing partner
three-putted.
Furyk did bogey the 17th by three-putting himself, but Singh was bunkered and
took four as well.
Another two-shot swing between them came on the last, Furyk's long putt being
followed by Singh's failure to save par from the greenside rough.
Harrington commented: ``I needed to put in a very good one and didn't do that,
so I am just playing for my pride tomorrow.
``I was quite happy and felt good about my game, but then I missed some
fairways and that killed me.
``Also I have putted very poorly and that is the crux. If you can't make
birdies the bogeys really hurt.
``It's just one of those weeks. I was putting great a month ago and terrible
this week.''
Colin Montgomerie did not try to hide the truth after failing to make any
impact earlier in the day.
``Same as most days - I am just not very good right now,'' was the Scot's
verdict on a one-over-par 71, which left him four over for the championship and
miles away from being in contention.
``Missing two cuts in a row was not the best preparation to say the least and
my objective on the plane over was to play all four rounds. I fulfilled that -
just.''