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TIGER, A.K. TO PLAY TOGETHER IN FINAL ROUND (5:50 p.m.): Tiger Woods and Anthony Kim. That will be the day's final pairing tomorrow here at Congressional will both players tied at 10 under heading into the final round. You couldn't draw up a better final pairing for this tournament if you tried.
Kim is the defending champion, having won here last year when Woods was on the sideline because of season-ending knee surgery. Kim has won twice on the PGA TOUR, but never when Woods has been in the field. Woods, of course, is the No. 1 player in the world and the player who Kim is most often compared to in terms of charisma and talent. It's also the first time the two will be paired together.
Michael Allen and Cameron Beckman will play in the second-to-last group just one shot back, but all eyes will clearly be on Kim and Woods.
Kim said tomorrow is a day he's been dreaming about for a while. Sunday, it'll become reality. -- Brian Wacker
ALLEN INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS (5:25 p.m.): Michael Allen has seen his share of ups and downs through a long and sometimes unfulfilling career that's spanned 337 events on the PGA TOUR. Now, it seems like the 50-year-old is finding new life.
"Making 100 grand in the real world is hard to do," Allen said. "I was better at this."
This being playing golf and of late playing it well with a tie for 14th at last week's Travelers Championship and a win at the Senior PGA Championship a month before that. Now, he finds himself one shot off the lead here at the AT&T National, where he's still trying to win his first career TOUR title.
His victory at Canterbury certainly helped his confidence, but so have some friends who earlier in his career chipped in some money to keep it going out here.
"I've always wanted to play out here," Allen said. "Now I'm just playing a whole lot better. I'll play out here until I can't anymore."
At this rate, that could be a while. -- Brian Wacker
NOT SO FAST (4:55 p.m.): When Tiger birdied No. 8 and eagled 9 it looked like you could strike up the band and start etching the trophy. Not so fast. The double at 11 and some mediocre play thus far on the back nine has brought an awful lot of people into the mix.
There are currently a dozen players within three shots of the lead. Moving day has been like the commute to Congressional with some of the fancier cars headed in the wrong direction. What looked like a Tiger runaway now includes Michael Allen, Cameron Beckman, Anthony Kim, Jim Furyk and others.
Regardless of what happens, Sunday is shaping up to be far more than just a ceremonial walk in the park for the world's No. 1 player and host this week. -- John Maginnes
ALLEN IN WITH A 65 (4:30 p.m.): Michael Allen had played in 336 PGA TOUR events prior to this week and hadn't won a single one of them, finishing second twice in his career. Earlier this year, the 50-year-old made his Champions Tour debut at the Senior PGA Championship ... and won.
After a 65 Saturday at the AT&T National, Allen is in position again, in the clubhouse at 9 under after three rounds. On the day, Allen, who was six back at one point, had seven birdies and just two bogeys. Allen's round was nothing spectacular from a statistics standpoint -- he hit 64 percent of his fairways and 78 percent of his greens in regulation with 28 putts -- but he clearly found a way to score, something that can be done on a shotmaker's course like this one. Below is a look at Allen's scorecard. -- Brian Wacker

TIGER GIVES TWO BACK (4:15 p.m.): If making a birdie after a bogey is known as a bounce back, what do you call making a double bogey after an eagle? That's what Tiger Woods just did, making a double bogey on the 11th hole to fall back to 9 under for the week. That's one way to create a traffic jam atop the leaderboard. -- Brian Wacker
EAGLE LANDS (3:55 p.m.): It didn't take too long for Tiger Woods to re-claim his spot atop the leaderboard here at the AT&T National, where he now leads by three after an eagle at the ninth hole.
After a 366-yard drive on the par-5 hole, Woods hit it to 25 feet, 5 inches and promptly rolled in the putt to get back to where his day started -- in the lead. -- Brian Wacker
ALLEN AT IT AGAIN (3:35 p.m.): Michael Allen turned 50 years old on January 31 of this year and promptly went out and won the Senior PGA Championship in his first start as a member of the Champions Tour.
Now he's trying to become the first player since Fred Funk in 2007 to win on the Champions Tour and the PGA TOUR in the same season. Allen is 4 under on his round today and 8 under for the week, three shots back of Tiger Woods, who just eagled the ninth.
In 2007, Funk won the Turtle Bay Championship before capturing the Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya-Cancun. -- Brian Wacker
SCORING SLOWED ... SORT OF (3:25 p.m.): It may seem like the scoring here at Congressional has slowed considerably since the first two rounds, but that's not really the case. The current scoring average here in Round 3 is 70.881. That's only slightly higher than each of the first two rounds (70.619 in Round 2 and 70.790 in Round 1).
The difference today is that no one at the top of the leaderboard is making any kind of move -- Anthony Kim is just 1 under, while Rod Pampling is even and Tiger Woods 1 over. Both Kim and Woods talked about liking a course that plays around par. Well, they certainly are getting that here. -- Brian Wacker
CLIMBING INTO CONTENTION (2:55 p.m.): While working on a future story for PGATOUR.COM, I ran into Ryuji Imada in the gym here at Congressional Country Club, where there is no fitness trailer for players this week because of the aforementioned and state of the art brand new facility. He was putting in some pretty serious work, as he has been for a couple of years now, and the effort seems to be paying off.
Imada has one of the best rounds of the day going at 4 under with a couple of holes left. Imada has two bogeys today, but he also has six birdies, including two on his last three holes. Imada has six top-25s this year and is looking for his first victory since last year's ... AT&T Classic (not to be confused with this week's AT&T National, of course). -- Brian Wacker
BACK AND FORTH (2:35 p.m.): Well, it seems at least from the early going that we're not going to see quite the low numbers that Tiger Woods, Rod Pampling and Anthony Kim put up at various points in this tournament.
Woods and Pampling are tied again at 9 under after a bogey by Pampling at No. 4. Kim is just one shot back, playing in the group right in front of them at even par.
While the course is still a little soft, it's clear that it's finally starting to firm up. Woods said that's exactly how he likes a course -- fast and firm. So far, though, he hasn't been able to much on it. -- Brian Wacker
BOGEY START FOR WOODS (2:15 p.m.): After finding the left trees off the first tee, Tiger Woods couldn't get out of the woods to save par, making a bogey on the opening hole at Congressional for the first time all week -- he birdied it each of his previous two rounds. Meanwhile, playing partner Rod Pampling just birdied the third hole to get to 10 under and in the lead by himself. -- Brian Wacker
LAST GROUP OFF (1:50 p.m.): Tiger Woods and Rod Pampling just teed off in the day's final pairing and it was a somewhat conspicuous start for Woods, who pulled his tee shot into the tree line left of the fairway on No. 1 at Congressional. You can follow Woods and Pampling shot-by-shot live with Shot Tracker by clicking here. -- Brian Wacker
DANNY LEE'S DAY? (1:40 p.m.): Former amateur star Danny Lee could be looking at his best finish since turning professional after the Masters.
Lee, who opened with rounds of 68-67 here at Congressional, is already 2 under on his round today with birdies on two of his first three holes to get to 7 under for the week. That has him just three shots off the lead.
Prior to this week, Lee had missed 3 of 6 cuts since turning professional with a season-best finish of T13 at the HP Byron Nelson Championship. Lee also missed the cut in his last two events, the Travelers Championship and the Memorial Tournament, failing to break 73 in any of his four rounds. -- Brian Wacker
MORE NUMBERS (1:30 p.m.): With Rod Pampling and Tiger Woods on the practice range preparing to tee off in 20 minutes from now, and in all due fairness to the most overlooked guy in that twosome, here's a look at some key stats for Pampling this week. He said yesterday that he really enjoys a course you have to think you're way around. Judging by the numbers below, he's obviously done that pretty well so far. -- Brian Wacker
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KEY STATS (1:10 p.m.): With Tiger Woods set to tee off in less than an hour from now, let's take a look at some key stats on Woods for this week. Pay particular attention to Woods' driving, putting and greens in regulation stats. When he puts up those kind of numbers, he doesn't lose. And when Woods holds the 36-hole lead -- which he's done 37 times in his career prior to this week -- he's gone on to win 31 times. -- Brian Wacker
| Tiger Woods Key Stats | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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EARLY MOVERS (12:55 p.m.): If Nathan Green's round today is any indication of what to expect at Congressional, it should be another day of good scoring.
Green just wrapped up a bogey-free round of 66, which included birdies on each of the last three holes. For the week, though, Green is just 2 under. -- Brian Wacker
UNLUCKY 7s (12:25 p.m.): Jeff Maggert, who just made the cut after opening with rounds of 72-70, fared a bit worse today. He's in with a third-round 77 that featured six bogeys and a double bogey. His 13 bogeys for the week is tied for the second most in the field.
The last month has not been a good one for Maggert, who has battled injury in the past. Since finishing in a tie for eighth at the HP Byron Nelson Championship he's missed two cuts and withdrew from another event. -- Brian Wacker
HOW TIGER DOESN'T SPEND HIS DOWN TIME (12:15 p.m.): Ever wonder how Tiger Woods spends his off time? Uh, not playing golf, that's for sure.
"I'm not anywhere near in the same league as Arnold [Palmer] when it comes to playing golf," Woods said. "I love playing, but when I'm at home it's more of preparing. I rarely ever go out and just play. Arnold used to do that all the time and still does."
With that in mind, you might be surprised at some of the courses Tiger hasn't played -- Pine Valley, Seminole, Merion (which will host the U.S. Open in 2013) and Turnberry (this year's British Open venue) among them.
"I don't play golf on my vacations," Woods said. "I'd never have a golfing vacation because it's not interesting for me to go out there and do that." -- Brian Wacker
SIGHTS FROM THE RANGE (12 p.m.): Vijay Singh, who just teed off with Hunter Mahan 10 minutes ago, seems to be having some tempo issues this morning. Arguably the PGA TOUR's biggest range rat, Singh was pounding hybrids on the range before teeing off. He and his caddie were talking about being a little too quick with his hands at times.
Singh has had an up and down year -- after struggling in his return from knee surgery early in the season, Singh strung together three straight top-16 finishes. Since then, however, his best result was a T27 in three events. This week, he barely made the cut with rounds of 70-68.
Another player battling injury is Boo Weekley. He was on the green in front of the clubhouse this morning trying to figure out his other problem -- the putter. Weekley ranked 175th in putts per round coming into this week and is averaging a mediocre 30 here at Congressional.
Still, Weekley, who is 4 under through two rounds and will tee off at 12:50 p.m. today, is happy with the way he's been able to fight through some shoulder problems. "The last week I played solid," he said. "I'm just hoping I can carry it over." -- Brian Wacker
INSIDE THE NUMBERS (11:40 a.m.): Tiger Woods wasn't the only one with a record performance through the first two rounds here. Rod Pampling, a two-time winner on the PGA TOUR who is just one stroke back of Woods, recorded his second-best two-day total at 131 (also a record here at the AT&T National).
The only two-round total better than that for Pampling was his 130 total during the 2006 Bank of America Colonial, where he finished third. Let's see what Pampling does playing with the tournament host and world's No. 1 player, though. Yesterday, Pampling made three putts over 20 feet on his way to a 64. If he does that today, he'll obviously be able to hang with Woods. That's a big if, of course. -- Brian Wacker
GOYDOS STRUGGLING (11:15 a.m.): Paul Goydos seems to be struggling under the weight of leading the mini money list to get into the British Open. So far, Goydos is 4 over through his first eight holes today. That doesn't exactly bode well for his chances of earning a trip to Turnberry.
The AT&T National is the sixth event in a six-tournament series where the top two money-winners, not previously exempt, earn British Open exemptions. Below is a look at the list of non-exempt players, their current position on the list and the money they have earned in five of the six events. -- Brian Wacker
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TIGER ON TOP (11 a.m.): We're a couple of hours away from Tiger Woods teeing it up in today's final pairing at the AT&T National, where his 36-hole lead at 10 under is the sixth-best 36-hole total of his career. It's also the lowest 36-hole in tournament history.
A big part of why Woods is in the lead is that he's successfully converted 47.22 percent of his one-putt opportunities. In his career, Woods has a one-putt percentage better than 47.22 percent 27 times. A dozen of those times he has gone on to win. You see what we're getting at here. -- Brian Wacker
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