You Oughta Know: Monday showdown for Poulter, Casey, Reed

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – With weather delays creating a marathon day of golf Sunday at PGA National, there is still plenty to be settled at the Honda Classic. Here’s what You Oughta Know heading into Monday’s conclusion, where Paul Casey and Ian Poulter share the lead:

• Casey has nine holes left in his final round as he looks to win on the PGA Tour for the first time since the 2009 Shell Houston Open. He tied for fourth at this event in 2010 and was T-12 last year.

• Casey lost in a playoff last week at the Northern Trust Open and could become the second player this season to win the week after a playoff loss, following Jimmy Walker’s victory at the Sony Open.

• Poulter is looking for his third PGA Tour win, but first stroke-play victory on U.S. soil. His prior titles came at the 2010 WGC-Cadillac Match Play Championship in Arizona and 2012 WGC-HSBC Champions, which was played in China.

• Poulter began the final round with a three-shot lead but fell back to the pack after finding the water on both Nos. 5 and 6. At 7 under, he is 2 over on his round with 11 holes to play.

• Five of the previous six Honda winners held at least a share of the 54-hole lead, the exception coming last year when 54-hole leader Rory McIlroy lost in a playoff to Russell Henley.

• Patrick Reed is one shot off the lead with 11 holes to play. With a win he would join Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Rory McIlroy and Sergio Garcia as the only players in the last 25 years to win five or more times before turning 25.

• Reed’s third-round 70 was his 21st consecutive round of par or better, the best current streak on the PGA Tour. With eight such rounds in a row, Casey has the second-longest active streak.

• Reed is looking for his second win of the season, having won the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in a (scheduled) Monday finish in January, and his fifth win since August 2013.

• This is the fourth unscheduled Monday finish on the PGA Tour since 2013, and first since the 2013 BMW Championship. It is the first Monday finish at PGA National since 2007, when Mark Wilson won in a playoff.

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Harrington leads after 36 as weather makes 'mess' of Honda

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) – Padraig Harrington is a 36-hole leader on the PGA Tour for the first time in nearly five years and he knows he has a long way to go.

A vicious storm Saturday at the Honda Classic made his weekend even longer.

Harrington made six birdies in the 12 holes he played Saturday morning in the rain-delayed tournament to complete a 4-under 66 and take a one-shot lead over Patrick Reed, with Ian Poulter and Brendan Steele another shot behind.

The third round ended 51 minutes after it started because of a storm that packed 50 mph gusts and dumped about 5 inches of rain on PGA National. The storm was so severe that it created an air bubble on the 18th green the size of a sea turtle, caused the sides of bunkers to cave in and toppled an electronic scoreboard off a platform and down to the bottom of a lake.

“That’s as bad as I’ve ever seen it rain,” Russell Knox of Scotland said after a 68 left him four shots behind.


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Only 24 players completed a hole before the storm arrived, causing the third delay of the week. The plan was to return at 10 a.m. Sunday to resume the round, and continue with the same pairings to play as much as possible on Sunday. The tournament now is to end on Monday.

“We’ve got pretty much a mess,” said Slugger White, the tour’s vice president of competition.

It helps that the next event is a World Golf Championship about a 90-minute drive down the highway at Doral, and there is no pro-am.

Harrington, the three-time major champion from Ireland, has fallen to No. 297 in the world and couldn’t qualify for Doral even if he were to win. He won the Indonesian Open on the Asian Tour at the end of last year, ending a four-year drought dating to another Asian Tour event.

His last PGA Tour victory was his second straight major, the 2008 PGA Championship at Oakland Hills. He said the benefit of playing Indonesia was a boost to his confidence, on and off the golf course. At such a small tournament, his name resonates.

“They treat you like a star, you play like a star,” he said. “I’m back to being a three-time major winner. I went for that reason – to give my ego a boost. There’s definitely a lot to being a big fish in a small pond.”

That was a proper analogy when PGA National turned into a pond, and Harrington surely played the role of a big fish.

Thanks to nearly four hours of rain delays Friday, he made it through six holes and returned Saturday with back-to-back birdies on the 16th and 17th holes, and then another from about 10 feet on No. 1, posing over just about every shot.

After a bogey set up by a wild tee shot on the par-5 third hole – he had to pitch down the second fairway because of the trees – Harrington ran off three straight birdies before a few loose tee shots cost him. The rough had become so thick and wet that he couldn’t reach the green on his last two holes, making bogeys on both.

He finished at 7-under 133.

“It’s nice to be in contention,” Harrington said. “I’m very positive about my game coming in here this week. I don’t know what’s going to happen the next 36 holes, but I have a good idea where I’m going. I’m pretty confident.”

Reed finished his 67 on Friday.

Poulter matched the low round of the week at PGA National with a 64 and was two shots back. He holed out for eagle with a sand wedge on the fourth hole and dropped only one shot on the back nine.

“If I play half as good as I’ve obviously played today, then I’m going to have a chance come Sunday,” Poulter said.

Steele’s 69 score doesn’t reflect his up-and-down day. He didn’t make a par until the 10th hole, playing the front nine with six birdies and three bogeys. And then he made nothing but pars on the back nine except for a double bogey on the 16th.

Luke Donald finished his 67 on Friday and was another shot back at 4-under 136.

The cut was at 4-over 144 and didn’t include Rory McIlroy. His first tournament in America in five months lasted only two days for the world’s No. 1 player. McIlroy bogeyed three of his last four holes on Friday for a 74 and missed the cut by three shots. 

Phil Mickelson, who had missed two straight cuts on the West Coast swing, finished up at 67 on Saturday and was five shots behind.

The focus on Sunday starts with Harrington.

“Through 27 holes, I was the most confident guy in the world, and less so at the moment,” he said after his bogey-bogey finish. “I know it’s going to be a long weekend, and a tough weekend. I have two options. I can play well on the weekend or I can dig deep and hang in there.”

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Koepka grinds to make cut in 'hometown event'

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – As he walked behind the sizeable grandstand that surrounds the 18th green at PGA National, Brooks Koepka appeared to be nearing an early exit from the Honda Classic.

Following an opening 78, Koepka had played his first eight holes in 1 under but still stood well outside the cut line as he waited on an official to grant a ruling after his approach to the par-5 had sailed over both the green and the gallery.

What resulted was a free drop, an improbable birdie and a surprising turnaround.

Koepka improved by 14 shots Friday, shooting a 6-under 64 that included six birdies across his final 11 holes. His second-round total was the best score thus far this week on the Champion Course, and at 2-over 142 he is projected to make the cut.

“I guess you could say it was the kickstart I needed,” Koepka said of his birdie at 18, where he eventually pitched from 65 yards to 22 feet and made the putt.


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While Koepka’s two playing partners in the tournament’s marquee group, Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson, both were projected to miss the cut, Koepka was able to rally in front of friends and family in what he described as his “hometown event.”

“It’s meaningful to make the cut at the Honda,” Koepka said. “Today was just a grind. The last two days was a grind with the weather and everything like that, so I’m very pleased.”

A winner earlier this season at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, Koepka noted that his attitude change in recent months afforded him the perspective to salvage this week’s tournament after a slow start.

“Just to be able to grind it out is key, and to never think you’re out of it,” he said. “Great players, no matter what they shoot the day before on Thursday, they are going to come out and they are going to play well on Friday.”

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Second-round play halted again at Honda Classic

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Play has been suspended twice at the Honda Classic because of inclement weather.

Tournament officials blew the horn at 8:23 a.m. ET because of heavy rain, and while players were originally held in place at PGA National, the decision was made a few minutes later to pull them from the course. Action resumed at 10:31 a.m., but play was again halted at 10:55 a.m. because of lightning in the area.

Nearly the entire morning wave was on the course when play was first suspended, including world No. 1 Rory McIlroy. McIlroy teed off at 7:45 a.m. but had completed only two holes in the wet conditions, opening with a bogey on No. 10 and following with a par on No. 11. He added a par on No. 12 after the first resumption of play, and at 4 over he is nine shots behind overnight leader Jim Herman.


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Patrick Reed’s 3-under 67 was the best score from the afternoon wave Thursday, but Reed stumbled out of the gates in the second round. His approach to the par-4 11th found a hazard, leading to a double bogey and dropping him to 1 under. Reed added a birdie during the 24-minute window of play Friday morning to get back to 2 under for the week.

No player had completed more than eight holes when the horn sounded for the second time. Robert Streb and Ricky Barnes had the best rounds going, each 2 under on the day.

Play is expected to resume once again at 12:30 p.m., marking a total delay of nearly four hours. With afternoon tee times already scheduled to challenge sunset, the delays mean that the entire second round will not be completed Friday, and the last players to tee off will only be able to complete a few holes before darkness.

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Second-round play halted again at Honda Classic

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Play has been suspended twice at the Honda Classic because of inclement weather.

Tournament officials blew the horn at 8:23 a.m. ET because of heavy rain, and while players were originally held in place at PGA National, the decision was made a few minutes later to pull them from the course. Action resumed at 10:31 a.m., but play was again halted at 10:55 a.m. because of lightning in the area.

Nearly the entire morning wave was on the course when play was first suspended, including world No. 1 Rory McIlroy. McIlroy teed off at 7:45 a.m. but had completed only two holes in the wet conditions, opening with a bogey on No. 10 and following with a par on No. 11. He added a par on No. 12 after the first resumption of play, and at 4 over he is nine shots behind overnight leader Jim Herman.


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Patrick Reed’s 3-under 67 was the best score from the afternoon wave Thursday, but Reed stumbled out of the gates in the second round. His approach to the par-4 11th found a hazard, leading to a double bogey and dropping him to 1 under. Reed added a birdie during the 24-minute window of play Friday morning to get back to 2 under for the week.

No player had completed more than eight holes when the horn sounded for the second time. Robert Streb and Ricky Barnes had the best rounds going, each 2 under on the day.

Play is expected to resume once again at 12:30 p.m., marking a total delay of nearly four hours. With afternoon tee times already scheduled to challenge sunset, the delays mean that the entire second round will not be completed Friday, and the last players to tee off will only be able to complete a few holes before darkness.

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