Min Woo Lee of Australia fired a seven-under par 63 to grab the lead after 54 holes at the PGA Houston Open  Jonathan Bachman / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
GOLF

Australian Lee displays ‘solid golf’

Agence France-Presse

HOUSTON (AFP) — Australian Min Woo Lee birdied seven of the first 14 holes in firing a seven-under par 63 to seize a four-stroke lead after Saturday’s third round of the PGA Houston Open.

The 26-year-old from Perth finished one off the Memorial Park course record to stand on 17-under 193, a 54-hole tournament record.

“Just some solid golf,” Lee said.

“Been playing really good the last few days. Just keep my head down.”

Argentina’s Alejandro Tosti shot 65 to grab second on 197 with top-ranked Scottie Scheffler, fellow American Ryan Gerard and New Zealand’s Ryan Fox on 198.

“I’ve learned from past experiences and obviously playing with Scottie the past few years, in the final group in a couple tournaments,” Lee said.

Lee, with his first 54-hole lead in a PGA event, seeks his first PGA title after three wins on the European Tour.

“Hopefully tomorrow is another good day,” Lee said. “Similar golf (to win). Just got to play pretty steady off the tee. A couple shaky drives at the end but kind of regrouped and made it happen. Just keep my head down and one shot at a time.”

‘Been playing really good the last few days. Just keep my head down.’

While Lee, Fox, Tosti and Gerard each seek a breakthrough first PGA triumph, Scheffler won nine titles worldwide last year, including his second Masters and Paris Olympic gold, and matched the course record with a 62 on Friday.

Scheffler was bogey-free for the week until he followed a birdie at the par-5 third with a bogey after missing the green with his approach at the fourth.

Scheffler birdied the par-5 eighth and answered a bogey at 13 with a birdie at the par-5 16th but the 36-hole leader only managed a 69.

“Yesterday, I holed a bunch of putts, today I feel like I couldn’t get the ball to go in the hole,” Scheffler said. “Feel like I hit a lot of good putts.

“There’s not really much you can do different out there. Try to shoot as low as possible today and I’m going to try to do the same thing tomorrow.”

Lee sank a six-foot birdie putt at the par-5 third and chipped in for birdie from 34 feet at the par-4 sixth to grab the lead at 12-under.

Lee dropped his approach inches from the hole at the par-5 eighth and par-3 ninth to set up tap-in birdies on both holes and sank a birdie putt from just inside 12 feet at the 10th for his third consecutive birdie to reach 15-under and stretch his lead to three strokes.

World No. 55 Lee birdied the par-4 12th after landing his approach inside five feet and when Scheffler made bogey at the 13th, the Aussie had a five-stroke edge.