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"I'm healthy and I'm beginning to feel the flow again," Singh said.
Rocha is starting to feel the flow as well, maybe for the first time in a long time.
Rocha nearly stopped playing golf last year, until two moves by the International Olympic Committee changed his mind.
And that's just one tiny part of his unbelievable story.
The world's 711th-ranked player needed to survive a pre-qualifier, then a Monday qualifier, then a playoff, just to get into the field at PGA National this week. Surprise! He's one shot off the lead, something he didn't even see coming.
"I needed a day like today like, you have no idea," Rocha said. "And it was for nobody. It's for myself."
The Honda is only his fourth PGA Tour event; the last was in 2003, and he's never made a cut. He lost his European Tour card last year and got status earlier this year on the Asian Tour, only after deciding that he wanted to continue playing golf for a living.
The IOC had much to do with that. First, they awarded the 2016 Summer Olympics to his native Brazil, then added golf to that program. Rocha -- who didn't know a word of English when he arrived at Mississippi State -- took those moves as signs of what he was supposed to do, so he recommitted to the game with hopes of finally making something happen.
After three straight birdies to open Thursday's round, something was happening.
And plenty of luck was on his side, too. He pulled his drive into a row of houses on the seventh hole, got a fortunate bounce off something and made par. He knocked in 30-foot par-saving putts that he was just trying to get close, saying bogey was a good score. Somehow, he never lost composure.
"I am surprised at how calm, how relaxed and how confident I felt all day," Rocha said. "That surprises me. I am not surprised about the fact that I can play proper golf. I've been working at it, and hard. And it has come out of me in the past before. I'm very satisfied with it, yes. Am I surprised to be in a good position on the leaderboard? Yes. But I wasn't shocked, you know, to see myself playing well."
[Associated Press;
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