Koepka leads in Korea, closes in on No.1 ranking
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[October 20, 2018]
SEOUL (Reuters) - Brooks Koepka
moved into position to claim his first win on his first start of the
new PGA Tour season after the American shot a five-under-par 67 in
the third round of the $9.5 million CJ Cup in South Korea on
Saturday to open up a four-stroke lead.
Koepka, who won two of last season's four majors and was named the
U.S. tour's player of the year, is on 13-under 203 for the
tournament, with compatriot Scott Piercy (72) and England's Ian
Poulter (68) tied for second on nine-under.
Victory for Koepka on Sunday would see him replace Dustin Johnson as
world number one for the first time.
Spaniard Rafa Cabrera Bello jumped into contention with a 65 and
sits in a group tied for fourth place on eight-under, while Jason
Day and Ted Potter Jr also shot 65s to move into a tie for 10th
spot, a stroke further back, alongside Ryan Armour (69).
Marc Leishman (68), a winner in Malaysia last week and CJ Cup
runner-up last year, stands on two under, one shot better than
Justin Thomas, who beat the Australian in a playoff in 2017 to win
the inaugural CJ Cup.
After skipping the first two stops of the new season, Koepka looked
out of sorts on the southern island of Jeju with a first-round 71 on
Thursday but was back to his best the following day with a 65.
His unblemished card on Saturday could have been even better had a
tentative eagle putt at the last dropped instead of sliding by.
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Koepka had an earlier chance for eagle at the 353-yard par 4 14th
but after his crunching drive made the green his first putt raced by
and he was relieved to see the birdie drop coming back.
He said that given the conditions, it was important to know when to
unleash the power and when to dial it down.
"These fairways are so tight that you come down on it a little bit
harder and deloft the club a little bit more and then the ball goes
even further," he said in a televised interview.
"So you just got to be a little bit cautious of it and make sure
you're hitting the correct shot and know where you want to leave the
next shot from.
"But off the tee you can take advantage, hit over a lot of these
bunkers and give yourself a good opportunity."
(Reporting by Peter Rutherford; Editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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