Thatcher keeps Cox Classic lead, but Day and Staten close in
 
Jul. 28, 2007

OMAHA, Neb. -- Roland Thatcher maintained his lead on Saturday at the $650,000 Cox Classic presented by Chevrolet, but 19-year-old Jason Day made a statement of his own by moving into striking distance with just one round to play.

Roland Thatcher
Roland Thatcher has gone 50 straight holes without a bogey heading into Sunday. (Chris Condon/PGA TOUR/WireImage)
INSIDE THE NUMBERS
THATCHER THRU 54 HOLES
Category Total Rank
Eagles 0 N/A
Birdies 19 T3
Pars 34 T21
Bogeys 1 66
Double Bogeys 0 N/A
Other 0 N/A
Driving Accuracy 71.4% T9
Driving Distance 305.3 yds. T24
Greens in Regulation 83.3% T4
Putts per Round 28.0 T9
Putts per GIR 1.667 T19
Sand Saves 33.3% T33

Thatcher recorded a 3-under-par 68 to move to 18-under-par 195, two shots in front of B.J. Staten (64) and three ahead of Day (62) -- who had the round of the day -- Ron Whittaker (63), Kelly Grunewald (65) and Scott Sterling (69).

"I've got a lot of people behind me with a realistic shot at winning the tournament," said Thatcher, a 30-year-old resident of The Woodlands, Tex. "I'm certainly not going to win making pars tomorrow. But I'm definitely in an enviable position. I'd certainly like to have a bigger lead, but I wouldn't trade with anyone."

Thatcher, a former collegiate standout at Auburn University, has not posted a bogey since the fourth hole on Thursday -- a span of 50 bogey-free holes. If he can continue that consistency on Sunday, he may be hard to beat.

"Not giving up a lot of shots was a big key today," said Thatcher, who hit 11 of 14 fairways and 15 of 18 greens in regulation. "There is no such thing as an uncomfortable lead, but I'm a little disappointed in how I played today. I had very few opportunities to make bogey, but I let some really good birdie opportunities slip through my fingers."

Being in the final pairing will be familiar territory for Thatcher. Most recently, he was in the final group during his victory at the Peek'n Peak Classic, as well as at the Henrico County Open, where he fell in a playoff to Nick Flanagan.

"I was much more comfortable (in the final group) the second time than I was the first time," said Thatcher, currently No. 3 on the official money list. "Hopefully I'll be that much more comfortable this time."

Should Thatcher join Flanagan in the two-win club this season, he'll have to contend with one of the hottest players on Tour. Day posted a bogey-free 9-under 62 to move into contention, set up by a tournament-record tying 7-under-par 28 on the front nine (his back nine after beginning the day on No. 10) at the par-71 Champions Run.

"Eight 3s today on the front nine ... I couldn't believe it myself," said Day, the winner a few weeks ago at the Legend Financial Group Classic. "I parred the two par 5s on my (front nine) which wasn't too good. But I fired it up on the back nine."

Day, who made the turn at 2 under, sat at just 3 under on his round through 12 holes. That is where the Aussie made his move -- playing the last six holes at 6 under, thanks in large part to a perfectly struck 2-iron from 270 yards on the par-5 sixth hole. He converted the 18-foot eagle putt to inch closer to Thatcher's lead.

"All I was thinking about was I was only 2 under through nine holes," said Day, who sits No. 6 on the money list. "Then I went nuts on the last six holes. This course sets up so well for me. I'm setting myself up for a really good finish this week. Hopefully I'll keep making birdies."

Day has plenty of work ahead of him on Sunday. In addition to trailing Thatcher by three shots, he also has a one-stroke deficit to B.J. Staten to make up. Staten enjoyed a nice Saturday stroll in Omaha -- playing in a threesome that included fellow Dallas residents Grunewald (65) and Jason Enloe (66) and failing to produce a bogey.

"We all fed off of each other today," said Staten. "It is a lot of fun when you don't make a bogey in your group. Off the top of my head, I don't remember that happening before. I'm usually good for a couple bogeys a round myself."

Enloe is joined at 14 under by Brad Adamonis (63), Michael Long (66) and 2007 winners Martin Laird (65) and Miguel Carballo (68).

Third-Round News & Notes: The third-round scoring average was 67.758 -- the lowest scoring average for a single round in Nationwide Tour history. The only other sub-68 average came during the third round of the 1991 Dakota Dunes Open (67.880). The previous low average at the Cox Classic for a single round came during the third round in 2003 (69.041). The previous lowest scoring average this season came during the third round of the Fort Smith Classic (68.985). ... Jason Day's 7-under 28 on the front nine at Champions Run equals the low nine-hole score of the season (Andrew Johnson during the second round of the Movistar Panama Championship). A 28 has been posted three previous times at Champions Run, with Jason Gore accounting for two of those during the second and fourth rounds in 2005. ... Tommy "Two Gloves" Gainey, playing this week through a sponsor's exemption due to his "Big Break VII" victory on the GOLF Channel, moved to 12-under thanks to a 4-under 67. ... The 54-hole leader has gone on to win 12 of 19 events this season. ... The 54-hole leader at the Cox Classic has gone on to win four of 11 72-hole events. ... There were 11 bogey-free rounds on Saturday, bringing the total for the week to 38. ... Sunday's winner will take home $117,000.