/ 5 November 2004

Tour Championship: A three-way tie

Vijay Singh went 15 holes without a birdie at the Tour Championship. He missed half his fairways and a half-dozen putts inside 12 feet. And when he walked off the 18th green on Thursday, he was right where everyone expected him to be.

Singh scratched out a one-under 69, leaving him two shots out of the lead as he tries to become the first player in 54 years to win at least 10 times on the PGA Tour.

”I’m right there, and there’s three days to go,” Singh said.

Not everyone wants to see the 41-year-old Fijian earn his 10th victory of the year.

Darren Clarke, Jerry Kelly and 50-year-old Jay Haas would be thrilled to win their first. They took a step in that direction on a soggy, blustery day at East Lake, each posting a 3-under 67 to share the lead.

The 67 was the highest score to lead the Tour Championship in the four years it has been held at the course where Bobby Jones learned to play. Only 13 players among the top 31 on the money list managed to break par.

And no one was surprised.

Heavy rain on Thursday morning turned fairways into small rivers, but a new drainage system at East Lake allowed the season-ending tournament to start on time. It dried up so well that tour officials decided to play the ball as it lies, leaving players to face several shots with mud splattered on their golf balls.

Then came the wind, whistling through the trees and making the closing holes play even tougher. Perhaps it was no coincidence that the trio in the lead had the earlier starting times.

Either that, or they know this is their last chance to win.

That’s something that bothers Clarke. Even after another successful Ryder Cup, his year won’t be complete if he’s not hoisting a trophy.

”I’ve had a very poor year,” Clarke said.

”We all play to win, and I haven’t managed to do that this year so far.”

Haas has gone 11 years without a victory, although he wouldn’t trade his season. He became the second-oldest player in the Ryder Cup, and on Wednesday was honoured with the Payne Stewart Award.

”I was probably more nervous about my speech yesterday than I was about my first round today,” Haas said.

The old man showed he still has plenty of game.

He nearly found the cup on the fly with a six-iron on the par-3 11th, making a 12-footer. He surged into a share of the lead with a five-wood into 15 feet on the par-five 15th to make eagle.

”I’m weak, short, slow, whatever,” Haas said.

”In the field of athletics, I would not be the favourite by any means. But there’s no

defence out here, so that’s the good thing for me.”

David Toms and Zach Johnson are each at 68, while the group at 69 included John Daly, Mike Weir and Padraig Harrington. A victory by Harrington would make him a PGA Tour member and send Tag Ridings — number 125 on the money list — back to Q-school. It also would knock Jesper Parnevik (number 40) out of the Masters.

Clarke seems to thrive in the big events, having captured his two United States victories at the 2000 Match Play Championship and the 2003 NEC Invitational.

This is his second straight week playing an event like the Tour Championship. He played at Valderrama last week in Spain, the final event on the European tour.

Clarke was in decent shape on the weekend until making an 11 on the diabolical 17th hole.

Clarke is no fan of Valderrama, but he found East Lake to his liking.

There’s no trees in the middle of the fairways here,” he said.

Kelly might be taking the best approach to the Tour Championship. He is disgusted with no wins this year, but figured he must have done something right to get into the top 30 on the money list.

”You’re out here to win, and I’ve gone the last two years without a win. And this year was really tough on me,” Kelly said.

”I really didn’t feel like I had a good year. But accept it a little bit and enjoy the fact you’re here. That’s what I’ve done. I’ve taken a lot of the pressure off and kind of enjoyed it.”

Kelly was loving life at four under par until he got to number 16 about the time the wind started to gust. His approach was about 20 yards short, and he had little chance to save par. Clarke also bogeyed the 16th to fall into a share of the lead.

Singh gave the gallery what it came to see — the number one player in the world, making the game look easy. He fired his approach into two feet on the opening hole for a tap-in birdie.

That didn’t last long. He took bogey on the fourth hole from a fairway bunker, missed good opportunities on the par five and would have been happy with an even-par round.

But he rolled in a 25-footer for birdie on the 17th, and suddenly his name was where it has been all year — near the top of the leaderboard.

”It was a day where you just have to manage yourself, get around, not get too far from the lead,” Singh said. – Sapa-AP