Lefty loses Players lead, but Tiger no threat
O’Hair birdies final 3 holes to go 1 up on Mickelson; Woods fails to rally
![]() Hans Deryk / Reuters Phil Mickelson shot a 3-under 69 to secure a spot in the final group for the last round of The Players Championship. |
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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. - Of all the great shots struck Saturday at The Players Championship, Sean O’Hair thought his would turn out the worst.
He had watched Peter Lonard hole out a 5-iron for double eagle on the second hole, the rarest shot in golf. He heard the gallery roar when Phil Mickelson pulled off some magic by hitting out of a bunker through a gap in the trees no bigger than a kitchen window and onto the 10th green some 159 yards away.
O’Hair watched his 9-iron take flight on the 17th hole and wanted to throw up.
He bowed his head when he felt the wind die. He stuck his hand on his hip as he watched the ball descend from the blue sky to an island green that suddenly looked smaller. And he was so surprised when it stopped 5 feet from the cup for birdie that he slid his tongue out of the corner of his mouth, perhaps too stunned to do anything else.
“I felt like puking,” he said.
It was a strange reaction for a guy who is leading the richest tournament in golf.
That turned out to be the centerpiece of a birdie-birdie-birdie finish for O’Hair, the perfect way to polish of a 6-under 66 that gave him a one-shot lead over Mickelson going into the final round of golf’s richest tournament.
And it might have prepared him for the anxiety attack Sawgrass tends to deliver to anyone trying to cash in on a $1.62 million prize.
O’Hair was at 9-under 207 and will be paired with Mickelson, who needed a few fortunate bounces for his 69.
Mickelson’s tee shot on the par-5 16th caromed out of the trees, allowing him to carve an approach around the trees to 20 feet for a two-putt birdie. His tee shot on the 18th hugged the left side of the lake before finding land, setting up a final birdie.
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Now for the final act.
“The last group is going to be fun,” Mickelson said.
But this is hardly a two-man show. Not at this golf tournament, and certainly not on this golf course.
Lonard played bogey-free after his double eagle until getting stuck behind a tree on the final hole and dropping a shot for 68. He was two shots behind with former U.S. Amateur champion Jeff Quinney, who shot a tournament-best 64.
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“I just let the pressure of 17 get to me, and I just hit it too hard,” Coceres said after his 68.
One guy who took himself out of the tournament was Tiger Woods, who failed to break par for the fifth straight round at The Players. He shot 73 — leaving him 14 strokes back at 5 over — and walked off the course without speaking to reporters.
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Woods snap-hooked a fairway metal into the water for double bogey on No. 7, pulled his tee shot on the next hole and made another bogey and couldn’t make up any ground on a day when everyone else was firing off birdies.
He played with Henrik Stenson, whose eagle-birdie-par finish gave him a 66.
Quinney was on his way to his 64 when the gallery came to life behind the second hole. Lonard had 211 yards to the front of the green, hit a 5-iron and couldn’t see when the ball caught the slope and raced toward the hole.
“The reaction said it all,” Lonard said. “But I didn’t believe it until I picked it out of the hole.”
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