The Daily Wrap-up, Round 3: The Honda Classic

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Mar. 6, 2010
By Staff and Wire Reports

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. -- Camilo Villegas came back to the pack on his back nine and wound up rallying to take a three-shot lead over Nathan Green and Vijay Singh after three rounds of The Honda Classic on Saturday.

Villegas was at 11-under 199, so even after making three bogeys in a five-hole span in what became a round of 67, he'll be the one to catch on Sunday.

"I'm sleeping in my own bed this week, which is always nice," said Villegas, one of many TOUR players who call South Florida home. "I've been nice and relaxed. So we'll show up tomorrow the same way and try to play some good golf."

Green (67) and Singh (69) are at 8 under, while George McNeill (66) and Matt Every (69) were tied for fourth at 6 under. Anthony Kim, who shared the 36-hole lead with Villegas, shot 73 and wound up six shots back entering the final round, tied with Michael Connell (69).

It's not over, Villegas quickly pointed out.

"Golf tournaments are four days," Villegas said. "So with that said, you've got to put four good rounds together and see what happens at the end."

All the talk before the tournament was about the difficulty of the course, before conversations on Thursday shifted to the gusting breezes and how they left players guessing.

On Saturday, a controlled burn left its mark on the Honda.

Earth, wind and fire, indeed.

A planned fire in Jonathan Dickinson State Park, about 14 miles north of PGA National Resort and Spa, made an already tough course even tougher. The wind shifted a bit after the fire started, sending thick plumes of smoke, ash and haze down directly toward the course. Play wasn't halted, though the day was clearly affected.

"It's not great, but everyone's dealing with it," said Green, an asthmatic who once worked in a crematorium his parents manage. "It's strange when you're looking down, hitting your putt and you've got ashes sort of going past your ball. We had that a few holes in, I think on 13 and 14. It's different. I don't think guys are really worried about it. You can just sort of smell it and taste it."

Singh shot his third straight round in the 60s, a 69 to keep him in the mix for what would be his first win since capturing the FedExCup in 2008.

"It's not going to be easy for nobody tomorrow," Singh said. "I'm just going to go out and play solid, try not to make too many mistakes. If you can keep the mistakes to a minimum, I think you'll be OK."

Also with a third-straight sub-70 round was Sam Saunders, who shot his third straight 69 and was tied for 10th, eight shots behind Villegas.

His coach wasn't expected to be with him on Sunday. Saunders' coach was his grandfather, Arnold Palmer. "The King" knows that if he's in the gallery on Sunday, the buzz he'll create -- on a course redesigned by Jack Nicklaus -- might take away from what his grandkid is trying to do inside the ropes, so Saunders thinks he'll stay away.

"Hopefully, someday, and I've said this many times before, that my game will become good enough and I'll become a good enough player that I'll be known as Sam Saunders and Arnold Palmer's grandson," Saunders said. "I think I'm getting there, but right now, it's fine. If I'm Arnold Palmer's grandson, that's kind of the deal. I understand that."

Villegas made four birdies on the front side -- including the par-4 6th hole, the tournament's toughest this week, for the second straight day. And after a bogey at the 10th seemed to derail him a bit, Villegas rolled in a 20-footer for birdie on the next hole, punching the air as the putt dropped.

Villegas had only four top-10 finishes in 21 TOUR starts last season, after winning back-to-back starts in September 2008 and thinking he was ready for a big breakthrough.

Maybe this is the year. So far in 2010, he was third at the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship and then tied for eighth last week at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

"We have our good years, average years and bad years," Villegas said. "I decided to look at the good side of it and work on those little things that I needed to get better, and show up this year a little more excited to be out here."

A win and a $1.008 million check Sunday would make him plenty excited.

Other notables at The Honda Classic
Name Score Position Comment Sunday tee time (ET)
Anthony Kim 5 under T6 Three straight bogeys to close out Kim's round dropped him down the leaderboard and leaves him six back going to Sunday. 1:15 p.m.
Paul Casey 3 under T10 Casey had a solid round of 2 under going until a costly double bogey on the par-3 17th, a hole he's played in 3 over this week. 12:45 p.m.
Justin Leonard 2 under T15 Leonard moved up 29 spots on the leaderboard thanks to a 66 that included six birdies -- four of which came in six holes. 12:35 p.m.
Sergio Garcia 2 over T44 It was a wild day of scoring for the Spaniard, who had four birdies, one bogey and one double bogey for his second straight 69. 10:20 a.m.
Ernie Els 3 over T52 The Big easy had a double bogey on the card for a third straight day on his way to a round of 70. 9:53 a.m.
Saturday's Best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The 538-yard par-5 third hole was the easiest with a Saturday scoring average of 4.541.
EAGLES: 3 BIRDIES: 31 PARS: 37
BOGEYS: 3 OTHERS: 0
The 479-yard par-4 sixth was toughest with a Friday scoring average of 4.50.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 6 PARS: 34
BOGEYS: 26 OTHERS: 8

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH THE PGA TOUR NETWORK
PGA TOUR Network correspondent Michael Collins offers these observations from Saturday. Listen to PGA TOUR Live coverage on XM 146/SIRIUS 209 or right here at PGATOUR.COM.

Sirius-Collins.jpg

I said it at the start of the week and I'm going to stick by it ... kind of. I said 9 under would win the tournament and while I now think 10 under will in, 9 under could force a playoff.

There wasn't supposed to be as much wind today as we saw, that's just how Mother Nature works sometimes. But to throw in a "controlled burn" at a state park east of the golf course that had all the golfers, caddies, and spectators covering their mouths and eyes is just wrong. Camilo Villegas said he couldn't even see his tee shot at the 10th hole, which is a 508-yard par 4. Vijay Singh commented how difficult it was to focus while ash was falling all around him. Hopefully whoever did the burn is done so we can get on to a final round that is setting up to be The Villegas Show.

Sam Saunders may not win the golf tournament, but being tied for 10th going into Sunday probably has his grandfather driving everyone nuts with the bragging and baby pictures at Bay Hill. Saunders' grandfater, in case you didn't know, is Arnold Palmer.

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