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Watney, McDowell tied at top of TPC

Players spent more time in the clubhouse than the golf course Saturday at The Players Championship, a rain-shortened day that left enough time for some high entertainment.Martin Kaymer made four straight birdie putts that travelled a combined 71 inches.
David Toms
David Toms tees off on the third hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament Saturday

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Players spent more time in the clubhouse than the golf course Saturday at The Players Championship, a rain-shortened day that left enough time for some high entertainment.

Martin Kaymer made four straight birdie putts that travelled a combined 71 inches.

The tournament staff had to move the cup on the 16th hole a few feet after the 4 1/2-hour storm delay because of damage around the hole that it couldn’t repair.

Ian Poulter was so desperate to finish his third round before darkness that he sprinted to the island-green 17th to finish the hole, then ran to the 18th tee and hit his drive to keep himself from having to wake up Sunday before dawn.

As for the top of the leaderboard?

There wasn’t nearly enough time to sort that out, not with so many top players in the hunt having played so few holes. And not with a TPC Sawgrass course that was softened enough by the rain that a marathon Sunday is up for grabs.

U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell and Doral winner Nick Watney were at 11-under par. David Toms and Steve Stricker were another shot behind, followed by Wells Fargo winner Lucas Glover and K.J. Choi. Kaymer and Luke Donald, both of whom can go to No. 1 in the world, were only three shots behind.

Of that group, only Kaymer (12 holes) and Choi (10 holes) made it past the turn.

“As far as winning it, I’m not too concerned about that yet,” Watney said. “We’re still in the third round, so I just have to take care of what I can and give myself a chance on the back nine.”

The biggest change was the golf course. It drained beautifully, but the greens were so soft after nearly an inch of rain fell that it looked like The Players resumed on the TPC Cupcake.

“I could see someone going and shooting 62, 63 tomorrow,” McDowell said. “I think there’s a low score on this golf course, depending on what the wind does tomorrow. But it really has opened the field up a little bit. It’s going to be exciting.”

Toms, the 36-hole leader who had to wait until dinner time to tee off, only made it through five holes. He made all pars, and probably was happy to stop. Toms had birdie putts inside 12 feet on every hole — two of them inside seven feet — and missed them all to stay at 10 under.

Only 40 players managed to finish the third round.

That included Poulter, who had reason to be exhausted for other reasons. Realizing that play was going to be stopped, and not wanting to return at 7:45 a.m. Sunday to finish one hole, he sprinted to the 17th green and quickly two-putted for par, then ran off toward the 18th tee and hit his tee shot as the group in front was just leaving the tee.

It’s a common move in tournament golf — Rory Sabbatini did the same at Doral this year. Once any player in a group tees off, the entire group is allowed to finish the hole. Poulter finished with a bogey for a 74, but at least he gets to sleep in.

“A little 300-yard sprint is well worth four hours in bed,” Poulter said.

The third round is to resume Sunday morning, and threesomes then will be sent out in the afternoon. With some 30 holes remaining and so many top players in the hunt, rarely has a final day been this wide open.

Sean O’Hair, who had missed his last five cuts, birdied his last two holes for a 67 to post the best 54-hole score Saturday at 7-under 209, but only because the leaders didn’t even reach the turn.

Peter Hanson bogeyed the last hole for a 66. Phil Mickelson barely finished, just not the way he would have liked. He made eagle on the 16th, followed with a birdie on the 17th and then ended with a bogey for a 69. He was at 5-under 211.

“I had a good finish until that bogey on 18,” Mickelson said. “That eagle on 16 and birdie on 17 got me into position where I thought you never know what might happen on Sunday. So I’ve got to go low.”

Kaymer might have had the most wild 12 holes of his season. He opened with four straight birdies by a combined 6 feet of length — the longest was 3 1/2 feet, two of them inside a foot. He tied for the lead by making a 10-foot birdie on the seventh, then ran off three straight bogeys to drop back. Kaymer made only three pars.

McDowell, Watney and everyone else were firing at flags and watching their shots stay around the hole. Robert Allenby, who had a 68, said he hit a five-wood about six feet short of the flag on the 16th and it only moved a few feet.

McDowell started with a birdie, then wasted a good chance on the par-5 second when he used a hybrid to bump his ball up the slope from behind the green and knocked it 20 feet by the hole. But he chipped in on the third for birdie and hit another good iron to about seven feet on the fifth to join Watney in the lead.

Watney, the winner of a World Golf Championship at Doral two months ago, could have started even better. He knocked in a 15-foot birdie putt on the first, hit a bunker shot across the second green to tap-in range, then faced the par-3 third hole into the setting sun. He hit the shot, looked up and was blinded.

“Where did it go?” he asked.

“Right at it,” Toms replied.

The ball settled four feet away, and Toms followed with a shot he couldn’t see to just outside five feet. Both missed their putts.

Stricker birdied the first and last holes he completed, and had a 65-foot birdie putt on the sixth when play was stopped. Like everyone else, he’s bracing for a long Sunday.

“You’ve got to take it easy tomorrow,” he said. “Come out with some intensity, but knowing that you have a long day.”

Hanson might have had the toughest time when play resumed. He was 7 under for his round through 16 holes and on his way to the fearsome island-green 17th when play was suspended. Then he waited four hours before going out to the range, and the last shot he worked on was an easy pitching wedge. It’s just hard to imagine an island on the driving range.

To the front pin at 17, his wedge nearly spun back off the green and he two-putted from the edge for par. His drive on the 18th went into the trees, and Hanson wound up missing an eight-foot par putt.

“Seventeen and 18 is a tough finish,” Hanson said. “But it’s an even harder start.”