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Augusta Masters: Watson tied with young gun Spieth

April 13, 2014 11:50 IST
Bubba Watson of the United States watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the third round of the  Augusta Masters at National Golf Club on Saturday

Bubba Watson squandered an early five-stroke advantage and was caught by 20-year-old Jordan Spieth as the youngster tied him for the lead at the end of a pressure-packed third round of the Masters on Saturday.

Spieth, playing with patience and discipline belying his years, posted a solid two-under-par 70 to join Watson on five-under 211 on a warm, sunny day at Augusta National that baked the famed greens to lightning speeds.

"Patience," Spieth said about the key to his round.

"We could tell early on the greens were ridiculous. You had to put the ball on the right spots and not let your focus stray for one moment."

Spieth, who began the day four behind overnight leader Watson, put himself in position to make Masters history on Sunday as victory would make him Augusta's youngest champion, putting him ahead of Tiger Woods who was 21 when he triumphed in 1997.

'All in all, a good day'

April 13, 2014 11:50 IST
Jordan Spieth of the United States hits a shot on the 15th hole during the third round of the Augusta Masters on Saturday

Watson, the 2012 champion, needed to curl in a four-foot par-saving putt at the last to retain a share of the lead on a day when he struggled on the heavily contoured greens.

"It was the firmest I've seen it in years out here," said Watson who only missed one fairway but needed 33 putts.

"I had a couple of three-putts. If you two-putt those you're right there and you've got a two-shot lead.

"All in all, a good day," Watson said, looking on the bright side.

"If somebody told me on Monday I'd have a 74 and still be tied for the lead I'd have taken it all day long."

One stroke back were Matt Kuchar, who used some brilliant chipping to register a 68, and Masters first-timer Jonas Blixt of Sweden (71).

Another shot adrift on 213 were American Rickie Fowler (67) and 50-year-old Spaniard Miguel Angel Jimenez who had seven birdies and one bogey in a tournament-low 66.

Watson wobbled with three bogeys in four

April 13, 2014 11:50 IST
Fans capture pictures as Bubba Watson of the United States hits his tee shot on the 17th hole on Saturday

An eagle at the par-five second hole helped Watson improve his 36-hole lead to a five-shot cushion but that disappeared under a spell of bogeys that turned the year's first major into a taut battle on a crowded leaderboard.

Watson wobbled with three bogeys in four holes from the fourth, striking delicate chip shots and sand blasts too far while leaving some downhill putts short in fear of rolling well by.

The poor stretch dropped Watson into a tie with Blixt and Thomas Bjorn of Denmark at five under with nine holes to play before the American moved back in front with a birdie at the 10th.

Ten players were bunched within two shots of the lead at the turn. Blixt also reached five-under after back-to-back birdies from the 15th but a bogey at 17 dropped him back and Spieth emerged as co-leader.

Jimenez matched the lowest Masters score

April 13, 2014 11:50 IST
Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain watches his approach shot on the 14th fairway on Saturday

At the other end of the age spectrum, Jimenez could put his name in the Masters record books as the oldest champion, surpassing Jack Nicklaus who was 46 when he won in 1986.

Jimenez vaulted into contention by matching the lowest Masters score by a player over 50 held by Ben Hogan (1967) and Fred Couples (2010).

"I feel very nice. Beautiful day out there, just light breeze sometimes. It's great," said the pony-tailed Spaniard.

Three shots behind the co-leaders were England's Lee Westwood (70), Bjorn (73) and American Jim Furyk (72).

Scott struggled on the greens

April 13, 2014 11:50 IST
Australia's Adam Scott misses a chip on the 15th hole on Saturday

Americans Couples, 54, and Kevin Stadler, U.S. Open champion Justin Rose of England and Australian John Senden were tied at one under par heading into what could be a wild shootout for the year's first major.

Another record-tying performance was turned in by long-hitting American Gary Woodland who took advantage of his early start on greens not yet baked to a crisp to fire a six-under 30 on the front nine and tie the Masters record.

Woodland had four birdies and an eagle to match the record low for the outward half by Johnny Miller (1975), Greg Norman (1988), KJ Choi (2004) and Phil Mickelson (2009).

He climbed within three shots of Watson before stumbling at Amen Corner as he ended with a 69 for 216, even par.

Adam Scott, last year's winner, struggled on the greens and posted a 76 for 217.

The next test for young Spieth will be contending with the pressure cooker that is Masters Sunday.