51. She told him Sutton was five strokes behind leader J.P. Hayes after the first round. 52. So what was Walters doing Saturday morning in second place at a major, starting the third round just two strokes behind the leader, Se Ri Pak? 53. Starting five strokes behind Hoch, Norman directed approach shots toward the pins as if he were shooting darts. 54. That left him three strokes behind unlikely leader Michael Bradley. 55. That moved Huston to nine under par, one stroke behind Love. 56. That year, Calcavecchia finished second here, a stroke behind Sandy Lyle. 57. That left him two strokes behind Lehman going into the final nine holes. 58. The player a stroke behind him, Phil Mickelson, has every right to feel robbed about the Masters, in general. 59. The Santa Clarita resident was three strokes behind his Thursday pace after two holes. 60. Then there is Tiger Woods, who is two strokes behind Azinger. |