Cameron Young delivers surprising rally, ties McIlroy at the Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga.Β βΒ The most unexpected of revelations unfolded Saturday at the Masters.
It became a golf tournament.
Rory McIlroy, who built the biggest 36-hole lead in history, wobbled and wilted β one shot in the water, another in the woods β while others surged and made a run at the reigning champion.
Cameron Young, who was eight back of McIlroy to start the day, overtook the Grand Slam winner late in the day. McIlroy briefly reclaimed a one-shot lead but gave that back with a bogey on 17, bending over in exasperation when he left a par putt just short.
Cameron Young fist bumps his caddie, Kyle Sterbinsky, on the 18th green during the third round of the Masters on Saturday in Augusta, Ga.
(Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)
Young, whose first PGA Tour victory came last August, heads into the final round tied atop the leaderboard with McIlroy at 11 under par.
The 28-year-old from Westchester County, N.Y., is going to take a business-as-usual approach to the biggest day of his career. He plans to start the day with Mass at a nearby church β before taking on Amen Corner.
βIt might be difficult to go undetected, but itβs not going to stop us,β said Young, who has three children younger than 5. βWeβll find somewhere and take the kids. Weβll be out in full force just like usual.β
Saturday was a remarkable turnaround for Young, who was all but cooked on Thursday, playing the first seven holes in four over par. He bounced back strong with a 67 on Friday, and a 65 on Saturday, collecting a combined 14 birdies over those rounds.
Rory McIlroy reacts in frustration on the 18th green during the third round of the Masters on Sunday in Augusta, Ga.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)
βI donβt get the sense Iβll be the fan favorite,β Young said. βRoryβs kind of a world favorite in the golf world. A year ago if Iβd been in the same situation, there would have been very little [fan support], and now thereβs probably a little more. So Iβll take what I can get.β
A host of other competitors moved within striking distance of their first green jacket β Sam Burns, Nick Lowry, Jason Day and Justin Rose.
Lowry had a hole-in-one on No. 6, a decade after acing the 16th. He became the first player in Masters history to record multiple holes-in-one.
Scottie Sheffler, ranked No. 1 in the world, started the day at even par but shot 65 to climb into the mix at four shots back, saying, βI donβt feel like Iβm out of the tournament.β
For Day, the key to his 68 was staying patient. He three-putted the opening hole for bogey but kept his cool.
βStatistically I average around four to five birdies a round, so I just knew they were going to come,β he said. βI just didnβt know when they were going to come.β
He got hot from the 12th through 15th holes, stringing together four birdies in a row.
Day has been in contention at the Masters several times, finishing second in 2015.
βI feel like the guys that are leading right now have all the pressure,β he said. βIβm just kind of the chaser. Usually the chasers donβt really have a lot of the pressure.β
That Collin Morikawa is even relevant at this point is stunning, considering the physical battle heβs enduring. The two-time major winner shot 68 on Saturday despite issues with an injury β possibly his back β affecting his legs. He said heβs swinging at roughly half-speed.
βMy legs arenβt moving the way they used to,β he said. βSo then Iβm throwing my arms, and Iβm having to time up my arms. So, like, every swing Iβm putting at, I am essentially just throwing my arms at the ball hoping that it squares everything up.β
Morikawa was six shots back along with former UCLA standout Jake Knapp and one behind another former Bruin, Patrick Cantlay (five back).