Spieth stays second as Koepka grabs Byron Nelson lead

Jordan Spieth plays his shot from the fifth tee during Round Three at the AT&T Byron N
AFP

Washington (AFP) – Second-ranked Jordan Spieth, trying to rebound from two disappointing efforts, remained second after Saturday’s third round of the PGA Byron Nelson Championship, two strokes back of leader Brooks Koepka.

Reigning US Open Spieth fired a three-under-par 67 in his hometown tournament, taking a bogey at 18 while US compatriot Koepka rescued a closing par to shoot 65 and seize the 54-hole lead on 16-under 194.

Spain’s Sergio Garcia and Americans Matt Kuchar and Bud Cauley shared third on 197.

Spieth is trying to pull off a comeback victory after missing the cut in last week’s Players Championship and suffering a last-day meltdown at the Masters, where a back-nine fade cost him a second consecutive green jacket.

Spieth sank a 20-foot birdie putt at the par-3 17th to reach 15-under as the hometown crowd roared with delight.

But at 18, Spieth was in the trees right of the fairway off the tee and blasted out through a gap to just short of the green while Koepka went over the green on his approach.

Spieth pitched to nine feet while Koepka’s pitch landed 10 feet shy of the cup. But Koepka sank his par putt to secure the lead and Spieth missed, falling two shots adrift.

Koepka won his only US PGA title last year at Phoenix, but he also took the Turkish Airlines Open on his way to being named 2014 European Tour Rookie of the Year.

The 26-year-old American had top-10 efforts at last year’s British Open and PGA Championship and his best major showing with a share of fourth at the 2014 US Open.

Spieth, who defends his US Open crown next month at Oakmont, sank four-foot birdie putts at the fourth and par-5 seventh, closed the front nine with a birdie and hit a three-foot birdie putt at 11 to reach 15-under.

At 14, Spieth salvaged a bogey after hitting his tee shot into the water, reaching the green in four and making a 22-foot putt to surrender only one stroke.

Koepka opened his roller coaster round with a bogey, birdied the third and par-3 fifth but needed two shots to escape rough and took a bogey at six.

After responding with a seven-foot birdie putt at the seventh and a 10-footer for birdie at the eighth, Koepka dropped his approach inches from the cup at 11 to set up a tap-in birdie and took the lead with a 20-foot birdie putt at the 14th.

Koepka pitched to two feet and tapped in for birdie at the par-5 16th to reach 16-under.

Garcia, the 2004 Byron Nelson winner, likes his chances at only three back.

“Jordan, Matt, Bud, Koepka, they are all playing well. It’s going to take a good round to get it done,” Garcia said. “I need to drive the ball a little better, like I did the first two days. If I do that, I have a chance.”

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