American Express: Max Homa, Tony Finau, Si Woo Kim share lead after three rounds

Max Homa made nine birdies on the way to a 7-under 65 in the third round Saturday, joining Tony Finau and Si Woo Kim atop the leaderboard.

LA QUINTA, Calif. –

Birdies, eagles and sunshine have always been the hallmarks of The American Express golf tournament.

There wasn’t much sunshine in the desert Saturday, but the birdies and eagles were still vividly on display.

By the end of Saturday’s third round, three players were tied for the lead at The American Express, but they were just three of eight players who held at least a share of the lead at some point on a cool and gray day that saw the final groups finish play in a gentle rain.

Tony Finau, Si Woo Kim and Max Homa all reached 15-under 201 and will share the final pairing Sunday on the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West. But 19 players will begin Sunday’s round within four shots of the lead, players ranging from non-winners like Cameron Davis to veterans like Rory Sabbatini to major championship winner Francesco Molinari to Patrick Cantlay, the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 10.

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Scoring on the day was so low that the top 12 players on the leader board Saturday averaged a 66.7 score on smooth greens and with no wind, meaning no one could break away from the chaotic pack.

“I’ve been driving it great on a lot of the holes where you’re going to have a wedge or short iron in. I’ve been playing the par-5s really well because of that, too,” Homa said after a 7-under 65, the best round of the three leaders. “I’ve just been able to kind of put myself in a position to have good looks for birdie, and I’ve been putting great, so it’s just something about these greens, it feels like home.”

Finau and Kim each managed 67 Saturday, Kim playing without a bogey and Finau overcoming a bogey and a double bogey for his 67. Richy Werenski, looking for his second tour win in five months, made one bogey and one eagle in carding a 65 and is alone in fourth at 14-under par. Tied at 13-under are Russell Knox, who tied for the best round of the week with a 64, Brian Harman and Emiliano Grillo.

Overnight leader struggles

Not every golfer found a bushel of birdies on the day. Sungjae Im, the overnight leader, birdied his first two holes, but then struggled with his driver and hit two approach shots into water on the way to a 1-over 73 and a 10-under total, five back of the leaders.

Homa, the 2013 NCAA individual champion when he was playing at the University of California who owns one tour victory in 2019, was like many golfers in the third round who shot low despite being caught up at one point or another by the demanding Stadium Course. For Homa, it was a tee shot into a lake on the par-4 seventh hole that led to a double bogey, his only big mistake of the day.

“I got the big numbers out of the way,” joked Homa, known not only for his game but his popular Twitter feed where he critiques amateur golf swings with brutal honesty. “I guess I made one, but I only had 1-over par hole today, which is great around here. It’s great anywhere, really. Just hitting a lot of good shots. I was a little bit cleaner overall today, which was nice. Something to build on going into tomorrow.”

Finau, a past Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup member of the United States, is looking for his first win since the 2016 Puerto Rico Open. Finau had to overcome a three-putt bogey on the opening hole and later suffered a double bogey after hitting his tee shot into a lake on the tough par-3 13th hole. But he rebounded with three consecutive birdies starting at the 14th, with none of the birdie putts longer than four feet.

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“I just knew what I did wrong as soon as I made contact (on the 13th), so I was able to, well, sometimes it’s not a terrible thing to hit a bad shot as long as you know what you did,” Finau said. “So it actually helped me on the holes coming in. I was able to hit a lot of quality shots really close, and I was able to finish off a solid round.”

Kim owns two tour victories, the last being The Players Championship in 2017. But after working with his coach Claude Harman III earlier this month in the desert, he feels his game is in shape to win again. Kim had perhaps the best chance to grab sole possession of the lead in the closing holes, but he missed a 10-foot eagle putt on the 16th hole and settled for a birdie. He then parred the final two holes to complete his 67.

“I thought that I played good and (that) the shot and everything feels okay,” Kim said. “But last two days I was putting pretty good, but shot was much better (Saturday) than the last two days.”

Like the leaders, Harman had to overcome a double bogey, his on the par-4 ninth which dropped him out of an early share of the lead.

“It’s one of those things you can make a bunch of birdies here, but if you get just a little off on a tee shot or a little off on a second shot you can get yourself in a really precarious spot,” Harman said. “That’s what I did off the tee there, and it sucks to make a 6, but I was happy coming back and making a 3 and a 4 on 10 and 11.”

For Homa, a chance to keep making birdies Sunday, perhaps under sunny skies, puts a smile on his face.

“It will be fun. It’s always fun playing around the lead. I’m just going to keep doing what I’ve been doing. I’ve been playing like this since (Mayakoba Championship in November), which feels good. It feels comfortable.”

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Know the contenders: American Express champion will likely be one of these 12 guys

The top 12 players hail from seven different countries, include a major champion and a guy whose first name you didn’t know was Milton.

LA QUINTA, Calif. – Large final-day comebacks have been pretty rare during the 62-year history of The American Express, the desert’s PGA event.

David Duval famously made up seven strokes in 1999 to win, but he had to shoot a 59 to do it.

With that in mind, the 2021 champion will probably come from a player who is close to the top entering Sunday’s final round.

To help you get to know and pick a favorite from the crowded field, here is a little primer on the 12 players within three strokes of the lead heading into championship Sunday.

Among the players up top, they range in age from 24 years old to 44, from No. 22 on the golf rankings to No. 390, from major champions to non-winners and the top 12 hail from seven different countries.

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Max Homa (-15)

Age: 30

Born: Burbank

Current World Golf Ranking: 103

PGA Tour wins: 1 — (2019 Wells Fargo Championship)

Best finish at this event: T48 (2020)

Did you know: Went to Valencia High School where he also played quarterback on the football team. He was named the Foothill League football MVP in 2009. … He went to Cal Berkeley

Si Woo Kim (-15)

Age: 25

Born: Seoul, South Korea

Current World Golf Ranking: 96

PGA Tour wins: 2 — (Wyndham Championship 2016; Players Championship 2017)

Best finish at this event: T9 (2016)

Did you know: He is exempt on tour through 2022 thanks to his impressive win at the Players Championship in 2017, though he has not won since.

Tony Finau (-15)

Age: 31

Born: Salt Lake City

Current World Golf Ranking: 22

PGA Tour wins: 1 — (Puerto Rico Open 2016)

Best finish at this event: T14 (2020)

Did you know: He is of Tongan and Samoan descent, the only PGA player ever with that ancestry. … His first name is actually Milton … He has only won once on the PGA Tour, but since 2019 he has a top-five finish in all four majors. … He has two pro sports cousins in Jabari Parker of the NBA and Haloti Ngata of the NFL.

Richy Werenski (-14)

Age: 29

Born: Springfield, Mass.

Current World Golf Ranking: 141

PGA Tour wins: 1 — (Barracuda Championship 2020)

Best finish at this event: T9 (2017)

Did you know: He went to Georgia Tech … In 2015, he was on the Golf Channel’s reality show Big Break and was the winner of that season.

Brian Harman (-13)

Age: 33

Born: Savannah, Ga.

Current World Golf Ranking: 97

PGA Tour wins: 2 — (John Deere Classic 2014; Wells Fargo Championship 2017)

Best finish at this event: T3 (2016)

Did you know: Tied for second at the U.S. Open in 2017. … Went to University of Georgia … Harman is a left-handed golfer, and it’s the only thing he does left-handed.

Emiliano Grillo (-13)

Age: 28

Born: Resistencia, Argentina

Current World Golf Ranking: 159

PGA Tour wins: 1 — (Frys.com Open 2015)

Best finish at this event: Only participated in 2017 and missed the cut

Did you know: Grillo was the 2016 PGA Rookie of the Year.

Russell Knox (-13)

Age: 35

Born: Inverness, Scotland

Current World Golf Ranking: 235

PGA Tour wins: 2 — (HSBC Championship 2015, Travelers Championship 2016)

Best finish at this event: T13 (2014)

Did you know: Part of the rare club who has had an “albatross” in a PGA event. He accomplished the feat with a 2 on a par 5 at the 2019 Valspar Championship.

Cameron Davis (-12)

Age: 25

Born: Sydney, Australia

Current World Golf Ranking: 217

PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: T28 (2019)

Did you know: Davis is one of the only players on tour who can play golf ambidextrously.

Rory Sabbatini (-12)

Age: 44

Born: Durban, South Africa

Current World Golf Ranking: 122

PGA Tour wins: 6 (most recently the Honda Classic in 2011)

Best finish at this event: 2nd (2000)

Did you know: Sabbatini changed his citizenship from South Africa to Slovakia, which is his wife’s nationality, in 2019.

Chase Seiffert (-12)

Age: 29

Born: Panama City, Fla.

Current World Golf Ranking: 271

PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: T21 (2020)

Did you know: Seiffert went to Florida State University.

Francesco Molinari (-12)

Age: 38

Born: Turin, Italy

Current World Golf Ranking: 130

PGA Tour wins: 3 (most notably The British Open in 2018)

Best finish at this event: T10 (2015)

Did you know: He was on the European Ryder Cup team in 2010, 2012 and 2018, all of which were won by Europe.

Doug Ghim (-12)

Age: 24

Born: Des Plaines, Illinois

Current World Golf Ranking: 390

PGA Tour wins: None

Best finish at this event: Missed cut in 2020, only appearance

Did you know: Ghim went to the University of Texas … He was the only amateur to make the cut at the 2018 Masters.

Max Homa shoots 65, explains his one-word mantra for life and why he tattooed it on his right arm

Max Homa shot 65 to share the 54-hole lead at the American Express as he bids for his second PGA Tour title.

LA QUINTA, Calif. – Max Homa has one word tattooed on his right arm – “Relentless.” It’s been his mantra for golf as well as life.

“That word just always like rang true in my head,” he said.

As early as his college days, he tried to live up to its meaning, telling his teammates, “you have to be a bulldog, you just got to be tough.”

Little did he know that he would experience some of the lowest of lows professionally, most notably in 2017 when he made just two cuts in 17 starts on the PGA Tour and earned $18,008. (He knows the amount to the penny.) It was following that season of failure that he got his ink.

“I had to remind myself that when I brush my teeth with my right hand I see it every morning in the mirror,” he said.

Homa’s relentless pursuit to become the best golfer he can be earned him a return trip to the Tour and he proved he belonged by winning the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship. On Sunday, he will seek further validation, heading into the final round of the American Express with a share of the 54-hole lead after shooting 7-under 65 at PGA West’s Stadium Course.

Homa, a 30-year-old Southern California native, has been bullish on his game since shooting a pair of 65s on the weekend at the Mayakoba Golf Classic in December to finish T-12. On an unseasonably cool, overcast day that included sporadic raindrops in the desert, Homa proved he’s more than just a social media darling, pouring in nine birdies and didn’t let a double bogey slow him down. In a word, he was relentless.

The American ExpressLeaderboard | Tee times, TV | Photos

Through three rounds, he’s made a tournament-best 24 birdies, which he attributed to being dialed in with his wedges and short irons. But perhaps his best hole of the day was scrambling for par from 109 yards after he mishit his tee shot just 241 yards into a bunker. Homa layed up and dropped a lob wedge 10 feet from the hole.

“He just had to get it on the green and I knew he was going to make it,” said Homa’s caddie Joe Greiner.

That he did. Homa sank 112 feet of putts in the third round and ranks second this week in Strokes Gained: putting, which comes as no surprise to Homa.

“I think I’m a great putter. I kind of realized that around PGA Championship last year,” he said.

Homa strung together four birdies in a row beginning at the second hole and birdied three straight starting at No. 14 to grab his share of the 54-hole lead with Si Woo Kim and Tony Finau. Oozing with confidence in his swing and his putting stroke, Homa spent much of his off-season working on improving his mental approach to the game. That includes giving himself positive affirmation.

The American Express
Max Homa putts on the 17th green during the third round of The American Express at PGA West Peter Dye Stadium Course. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/USA TODAY Sports)

“When I wake up, when I’m nervous, on a certain tee shot, where I feel like I might be getting antsy I just say three things I’m grateful for,” he explained. “It kind of calms me down.”

Homa guessed that during Saturday’s riveting 65, he took time to express his gratitude six or seven times.

“It’s just a good way to stay happy,” he said. “Golf is my life, but I don’t want it to consume me. I want to win, I want to be the best player in the world at some point one day, I want to be the best me I can be and all that kind of comes with being a happy dude. So I’m just trying to be a happy dude, I guess.”

Homa might be even happier with his position heading into Sunday’s final round if not for two sloppy holes: he tripled the 10th hole on Friday and made double at No. 7 on Saturday. He knows he could be running away with the tournament, but then again he understands that Pete Dye’s Stadium Course has its way of striking back.

“I guess I’ve already gotten some of the bite out of the way, so I like my chances,” he said.

No matter what, he’ll be relentless in his pursuit of victory.

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PGA Tour pros compete in Arizona on ‘the day the golf world forgets about Charlie Woods’

The Outlaw Tour’s Pard’ner Shootout drew a handful of PGA Tour pros in Arizona for one last tournament on Monday.

The Outlaw Tour promoted its Pard’ner Shootout as “the day the golf world forgets about Charlie Woods.”

Well, the younger Woods is still creating a buzz on the Monday after he and famous father Tiger finished seventh in the PNC Championship.

But the mini tour based in Arizona did draw a handful of PGA Tour pros, a Golf Channel broadcaster and several outstanding local golfers for one last tournament before Christmas.

Joel Dahmen is among the Tour pros in the field. He’s paired with Brandon Harkins, while Max Homa is playing with new Golf Channel on-air personality and good buddy Shane Bacon.

Others in the field: Nate Lashley, Parker McLachlin, Alex Cejka, Sam Triplett, Dylan Wu, Charlie Beljan, University of Illinois and Scottsdale product Michael Feagles as well as Grand Canyon University men’s golf coach Jesse Mueller, who played at Arizona State after a strong amateur career.

The 18-hole outing is being played at Arrowhead Country Club in Glendale and is live on a Twitch livestream.

SCORES: Outlaw Tour Pard’ner Shootout

Dahmen and Lashley are no strangers to the mini-tours. They were among the Tour pros who played in the Scottsdale AZ Open in May during the Tour’s shutdown.

Also in May, Dahmen, while playing with a couple members of the Chicago Cubs, shot a course-record 58 at Mesa Country Club.

Max Homa saw Fred Couples do ‘the most old-guy veteran move’ at the Masters

On his “Get a Grip” podcast with Shane Bacon, Max Homa told a funny story about a veteran move he saw Fred Couples make at the Masters.

While fans never heard anyone on the Masters broadcast utter the term “mud ball” last week — they opted instead to say there was turf, earth, or my personal favorite, “organic matter” on the ball — chances are you heard a few players mention them due to the wet conditions, especially on Thursday and Friday.

Mud on a golf ball can significantly impact its flight and distance. That’s pretty easy to understand. The problem is, you never know just how much of an impact there will be.

On his “Get a Grip” podcast alongside Shane Bacon, 2020 Masters rookie Max Homa recapped his first experience at Augusta National and told a fun story about playing with Fred Couples and witnessing one of his savvy, veteran moves firsthand on No. 15.

“Fred was going before me, I wasn’t really watching, but he hit this lay up and it sounded like really bad contact,” said Homa. “I looked over and the ball was not above my head and it was screaming down the fairway. It was so sick, he was getting the mud off the golf ball on the lay up, he was making sure it rolled and didn’t plug.”

“I went over to him and said ‘that is the most old-guy veteran move I have ever seen,’ and he was laughing.”

If you’re like us and already missing the Masters, listen to the full episode here.

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It’s a strange but beautiful time to be a rookie at the Masters

The first ever November Masters poses an interesting challenge for some first-time players at Augusta National. For better or for worse.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Abraham Ancer’s first impression of Augusta National has a familiar ring: “I’m in heaven, man.”

The butterflies first hit Max Homa as he approached the gates on Washington Road.

“Magnolia Lane to me, it looked a lot smaller than I thought it would,” said Homa on his “Get A Grip” podcast with Shane Bacon. “But once you break through the trees to the front that everyone’s seeing with the picture, the logo and then the clubhouse, that felt brighter and bigger. I hate to be like the cheesy guy but … there was more volume to it.  It just felt oddly satisfying to see. The building just seemed whiter; they pop more. It’s all the corny stuff you hear all the time.”

Homa didn’t want to sound corny, he said, but the cliches are all true. The 29-year-old UCLA grad told Rory McIlroy it felt like Disneyland. Homa admittedly stood in awe in the practice area watching Tiger Woods. Not because he hadn’t practiced alongside Woods before, but because he was next to Tiger Woods at Augusta National during the Masters.

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“It was a million pinch-me moments in a day,” said Homa of his Monday debut.

There are 26 first-timers at the first-ever November Masters this week. Hopefully, no rookie will ever experience another week like it, given that there are no patrons and the Par 3 Contest was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. There’s no entourage either. Players are only allowed one designated coach and one guest. 2019 U.S. Amateur champ Andy Ogletree designated his dad as his coach (he’s not) and mom as his guest. He also brought grandma in for a special assignment.

“She’s the best cook I know,” said Ogletree. “We asked if she would come hang out, you know, just to give me a little more comfort back home at our house this week.”

Only three players in Masters history have won in their first attempt: Horton Smith (1934), Gene Sarazen (1935) and Fuzzy Zoeller (1979).

But no other Masters has been anything like this one.

Colin Morikawa comes into his first Masters already a major winner. His comfort factor level is high, which is makes it easier to show up to a new place, even a place like Augusta National, and adapt quickly. The empty course – no grandstands, no ropes, no galleries – Morikawa believes might work to his advantage.

“I think I got very lucky showing up to the Masters in November this year, having no fans, because I was able to step on to No. 1 this morning and just go out and play golf,” said PGA champ Morikawa on Monday. “I didn’t have to look at the fans line the fairways or see the grandstands, wherever they might be. I saw the course for what it is.

“I think that’s going to be really beneficial, not just for this year, but for years forward.  Yes, sight lines might change with grandstands, but to see it for what it is, very, very helpful.”

Matthew Wolff during a practice round prior to the 2020 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Matthew Wolff, like so many, grew up trying to make putts to win the Masters during contests with friends. His favorite memory watching the Masters came last year when Woods won on Wolff’s birthday, April 14. Wolff looks forward to a time when he can celebrate with his own special birthday round at Augusta.

This week’s Masters marks Wolff’s third major championship appearance after finishing runner-up to Bryson DeChambeau in September at the U.S. Open at Winged Foot. While Wolff’s aim is to treat this week like any other tournament, the history at Augusta National and the past champions on the grounds makes that task nearly impossible.

That being said, he does feel that a quiet Masters plays to his advantage.

“Coming down the stretch with a one-shot lead,” said Wolff, “it’s definitely, in my opinion, I think it’s a little more relaxing coming down without, you know, thousands and thousands of fans sitting behind the green watching your every shot.”

While waiting for the green to clear on the 11th hole Monday, Homa stood in awe at the scene laid out before him. At last, he was living out a childhood dream.

Once the green cleared, however, he gripped an 8-iron and went to work.

It was like that all day, Homa said on his podcast, this back and forth between are-you-kidding-me moments and the familiarity of routine. Homa turned professional at the same time as Justin Thomas, who is now playing in his fifth Masters. The wait might have helped Homa to soak it in even more.

“It just felt like a little bit more of an appreciation for just being here,” said Homa, “while also being insanely motivated to be here for every Masters forever. … This is nuts.”

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U.S. Open: Winged Foot gets a thumbs up from players who missed the cut

There were no complaints from a trio of players who left Winged Foot after missing the U.S. Open cut.

MAMARONECK, N.Y. – There were no complaints from a trio of players who left Winged Foot after missing the U.S. Open cut.

They were actually quite complimentary on social media Saturday despite collecting the lion’s share of 1,383 bogeys, 179 doubles and 19 others. Most failed to capitalize when the famed West Course was vulnerable in the opening round and struggled mightily with the wind and the rough and the pins and the greens in the second round.

Eddie Pepperell checked out with a 14-over total of 154, but was ready to go again.

“Upon reflection, and despite playing like a right doughnut, I would do it all again at Winged Foot,” the 29-year-old Englishman tweeted. “It’s simply an awesome golf course. Can’t think of a course that tests you in so many ways. Thanks @USGA for humbling me at the same time as invigorating me.”

U.S. Open: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV | Best photos

The cut was 6-over, three strokes lower than it was in 2006 when the U.S. Open was last played at Winged Foot.

Receptive greens and welcoming pins in Round 1 accounted for the difference.

Phil Mickelson did not look comfortable for one minute at Winged Foot, not even on the driving range. He again took a scenic route carding rounds of 79 and 74, and was up early on Saturday hawking a line of coffee released this week.

“After being beaten up and battered by Winged Foot, it’s nice to find out @ForWellness doesn’t just help my mind and body, it comforts my ego and soothes my hurt soul,” Mickelson tweeted along with a bed-head photo.

To kill time on his flight home, Max Homa solicited questions and was promptly asked what non-golf activity equates to playing Winged Foot.

“Playing Winged Foot is like going for a run,” he tweeted after is 14-over performance. “Ur optimistic to start, ur almost immediately pissed off, there’s a lot of heavy breathing, the views are great, ur wondering why u did this to urself, there’s some self-hate involved, finishing is euphoric, ur gunna do it again.”

Mike Dougherty covers golf for The Journal News/lohud.com. He can be reached at mdougher@lohud.com or on Twitter @hoopsmbd and @lohudgolf.

Michael Thompson and Richy Werenski share 3M Open lead, but who will ‘step up’ on Sunday?

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak discusses the third round of play from TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Open.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak discusses the third round of play from TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Open.

Michael Thompson and Richy Werenski share 3M Open lead, but who will ‘step up’ on Sunday?

Michael Thompson and Richy Werenski are all tied atop the 3M Open leaderboard, but who will “step up” on Sunday?

On the 18th hole at TPC Twin Cities, Michael Thompson faced a critical decision.

Having already hit his tee shot into the water lining the right side of the dogleg-right par 5, Thompson, leading by one stroke, had 267 yards to the flag. Should he go for the glory or lay up and try to minimize his mistake? Thompson’s caddie Damian Lopez had a pretty good idea what he should do and let him know.

“It’s time to step up.”

After all, TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota is an Arnold Palmer designed course, and The King would certainly say to go for broke. Thompson ripped an adrenaline-laden fairway wood over the water and on to the green, but it had too much juice and caught the back bunker. But Thompson splashed to within inches of the hole for a tap-in par and a share of the 54-hole lead with Richy Werenski. Afterwards, Thompson put into words how big that shot was for his confidence going into Sunday’s final round.


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“There’s plenty of shots out here on Tour, especially this golf course with the water, where you just need to I like to say,’Just sack up and hit the shot.’ To be able to do that, hit a good, quality golf shot that almost held the green and then to get that up and down with that bunker shot, I mean, I’m honestly just proud of myself for stepping up,” he said.

Despite conceding that he fought some early nerves, Thompson strung together three birdies in a row, starting at the fifth and when he made a two-putt birdie at the par-5 12th hole, he owned a four-stroke lead. And yet by the time he opted to go for the green at 18 with his third shot (after a penalty), Thompson’s lead was on the verge of vanishing. His lone bogey of the day at 17 en route to shooting 3-under 68 combined with three birdies in the final four holes by Ricky Werenski has the two 36-hole leaders knotted again at 15-under 198.

“To finish with that par on 18 is huge,” said Thompson, who celebrated with a fist pump. “I really wanted that par, I didn’t want to compound the mistake I made on 17. I think that’s going to bode well for me tomorrow.”

Sunday is setting up for a sprint to the finish line with 12 golfers within four strokes of the lead. Werenski, 28, is bidding for his maiden PGA Tour title while Thompson, 35, won his lone title seven years ago at the Honda Classic. Tony Finau (69) and former Masters champion Charl Schwartzel (66) are the closest pursuers, two strokes behind. Finau, who fired his caddie this week and has swing instructor Boyd Summerhays on the bag, has just one victory to his credit at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open and has the most top-eight finishes with 24 of any player without a win on Tour in the last four seasons. It’s time for him to “step up” on Sunday. Schwartzel, a 35-year-old South African, has two career Tour victories and is returning from injury.

“It’s been a while since I’ve had a chance,” Schwartzel said. “That really was the goal coming into this week, at least have a chance to win.”

Max Homa, whose lone win came at the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship, is solo fifth at 12-under par after 64. Cameron Tringale did one better, shooting a tournament-best 8-under 63 and is part of a six-way tie at 11 under. Of the 12 players within four strokes of the lead heading into the final round, only Ryan Moore and Nick Watney with five wins apiece have hoisted a trophy more than two times on the Tour. For Thompson, the 3M Open is the first time he has led or shared the lead entering the final round since his victory in 2013.

“I haven’t been in this position in a long time,” Thompson said. “It was nice to get my feet wet.”

Last year, it took an eagle at the 72nd hole for Matthew Wolff to win the inaugural 3M Open. Whoever is going to claim the title this year will, in the words of Lopez, have to “step up.”

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Max Homa said on Twitter he was due (even though he’s sworn off Twitter)

Max Homa rolled through an impressive 64 on Saturday, and he stands at 12-under par through three rounds at the 3M Open.

Max Homa said this would happen. On Twitter. You know how Homa, one of the funniest tweeters in the history of the PGA Tour, has turned social media roasts of golf swings into something we can all agree is wildly entertaining, right?

Well, in advance of this week’s 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities, Homa insisted he was inching closer to a breakthrough, even if recent results didn’t seem to bear that out.

Homa had missed four of five cuts since the Return to Golf, his only weekend appearance producing a T-41 at the RBC Heritage. And in his most recent round, the gregarious Homa dropped an ugly 78 in the second of the Memorial.

Yet there he was on Twitter, just hours after being sent packing from Columbus, telling the social media world he’d be ready to make some noise soon.

He was right.

With his putter finally playing nice, Homa rolled through an impressive 64 on Saturday, and he stands at 12-under par through three rounds, putting him firmly in the mix heading into Sunday.

“I guess it’s been, I don’t know, four or so months since I’ve been in any kind of heat other than the cut heat, so it was kind of nice to just keep doing what I was doing at the beginning of the season or the beginning of the year,” he said. “So I don’t know if I made a big jump. I know where my game is typically all the time and I’ve known it’s been really good. Just, like I said a couple days ago, the putts weren’t going in and it made me feel kind of anxious at all times that you just can’t really a mistake.”


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Homa came flying out of the gates on Thursday, posting a 65 in the tournament’s opening round, but then fell back in the pack on Friday with a 1-over 72. The 2019 Wells Fargo champ insisted not much changed between Friday and Saturday, though, and he simply kept his wits about him.

“Honestly, I thought I played OK (Friday), I just wasn’t great. If I don’t hit the ball on the water on 7 near the end of my round, I shoot 1 under, which would have been a fine round in the wind yesterday. I didn’t put too much stock in the score,” Homa said. “I knew I was swinging it well, I just didn’t hit a lot close yesterday.

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“So I came out today with a lot of optimism. I know my game feels very, very good, it has for a couple weeks despite some of the scores, but now that I’m making a few putts, it feels quite a bit easier.”

His card on Saturday looked eerily similar to the one he posted Thursday — Homa birdied Nos. 6, 7, 12, 15, 16 and 18 — and although he wasn’t sure at the end of his round how he’d stack up with the leaders, he was just happy to be in the conversation again.

“I’m not exactly sure where I am, but feel like it’s got to be pretty decent. Yeah, when you’re as far back as I was to start the third round, just having to do your best to make as many birdies as you can and inch forward, if that means picking up one stroke on the leader, if it means picking up two, that’s all you can do. So I felt that I did that,” he said. “Obviously, I went pretty low. That’s kind of the hole I dug myself yesterday, but giving myself a chance tomorrow to fire another low one and maybe chase somebody down, that’s all you can ask for.”

So how will Homa celebrate with his Twitter following, which is one of the most rabid on the PGA Tour? They’ll be ecstatic, right?

“I couldn’t tell you, I don’t go on it anymore,” Homa said. “Yeah, hopefully … I couldn’t really care.”