Mito Pereira leads PGA Championship; Tiger Woods withdraws - Los Angeles Times
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Mito Pereira leads PGA Championship; Tiger Woods withdraws after a 79

Mito Pereira waves after making a birdie putt on the par-four 18th hole in the third round of the PGA Championship.
Mito Pereira waves after making a birdie putt on the par-four 18th hole in the third round of the PGA Championship. He shot a one-under-par 69 and leads by three at nine-under 201.
(Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press)
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Mito Pereira spent four hours soaring and sliding at Southern Hills in the cold and wind, calling it the biggest round of his life Saturday in the PGA Championship and one that gave him an idea of what to expect Sunday.

Pereira soared to a five-shot lead. He nearly lost it all in six holes. And when a third round as fickle as the wind finally ended, the 27-year-old from Chile stood on the cusp of fame.

He made three birdies over his last six holes, the final hole from just outside 25 feet that he called a bonus, giving him a one-under-par 69 and a three-stroke lead over Matt Fitzpatrick of England and Will Zalatoris.

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“It’s by far the biggest tournament I play, the biggest round of golf. And tomorrow is going to be even bigger,” Pereira said. “Just try and keep it simple. Try to do the things I’ve been doing. Try to not even look at the people that’s around me.”

His inspiration for moments like this is Tiger Woods, who won’t be around. Woods, limping badly on his battered right leg from his car crash 15 months ago, withdrew from the final round after posting a 79, his highest score ever in a PGA Championship.

It was his first withdrawal from a major in his pro career, and it was not a big surprise. The pain was more noticeable than it was on the weekend at the Masters, and he was 21 shots behind.

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Tiger Woods walks on 18th green during the third round of the PGA Championship on May 21, 2022.
Tiger Woods walks on 18th green during the third round. Woods withdrew for the first time in a major as a pro. He limped around Southern Hills for a 79.
(Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press)

Pereira was at nine-under 201 as he tries to become Chile’s first major champion and the third player from South America.

If he lacks experience — this is his first PGA and only second major — so do the players closest to him. None of the top six have ever won a major. The leading four players have yet to win on the PGA Tour, the toughest circuit in golf.

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Fitzpatrick birdied his last two holes for a 67 and is the most tested of the bunch with his seven European tour victories and two Ryder Cup teams.

Zalatoris also had a late recovery, though his early damage was significant. Leading by one at the start of the round, confident as ever that his game is suited for the toughest tests, Zalatoris dropped four shots in seven holes to fall five behind.

He was helped by Pereira running into trouble too — it seemed everyone did — by making four bogeys in a five-hole stretch around the turn. Zalatoris had a pair of birdies on the back nine for a 73 and was still very much in the mix.

“I was pretty frustrated with the start, but I would rather have a frustrating start and good finish. It’s good momentum heading into tomorrow,” Zalatoris said.

Will Zalatoris shot a bogey-free 65 in the PGA Championship on Friday, giving him a one-shot lead as Tiger Woods manages to make the cut.

May 20, 2022

Pereira, a PGA Tour rookie, was the Korn Ferry Tour player of the year in 2021. No tour rookie has won a major since Keegan Bradley in the 2011 PGA Championship.

“I was playing really good, and suddenly I made four bogeys in five holes. It was a tough place to be at that moment,” he said. “But just found myself from 13 on. Those holes are pretty tough. So really happy how I ended up playing. The birdie on 18 was a bonus.

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“Just happy to be in this position.”

There were missed opportunities for so many others on a rough day featuring a wind out of the north that made Southern Hills play entirely different.

Justin Thomas, who won the 2017 PGA Championship, went 12 holes without a birdie, and then he gave it back with a bogey on the closing hole for a 74. Two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson looked shaky as ever on the greens, making three bogeys over his last four holes for a 73. They went from the cusp of contention to seven strokes behind.

Rory McIlroy had a six-hole stretch around the turn that he played in six over — and that even included a birdie — for a 74 to fall nine shots back.

Zalatoris will be in the penultimate group with Cameron Young, the son of a PGA professional, who charged into the mix by driving the 296-yard 17th hole and making a 25-foot eagle. He wound up with a 67 and was four shots behind.

Pereira wasn’t immune from a slide. He became the first player to reach 10 under for the championship with a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-five sixth, and he stretched the lead to five shots when Zalatoris made another bogey.

But then the Chilean took bogey on the par-three eighth, chunked an approach from the fairway on the ninth and made bogey, had a wedge spin off the front of the green at No. 10 and into the bunker for bogey, and went over the 12th green for a fourth bogey in five holes.

Zalatoris briefly caught him with a 35-foot birdie putt on the par-five 13th. That only lasted as long as it took Pereira to make a birdie from 18 feet, and the Chilean answered with a daring shot over the edge of a bunker to six feet for birdie on the par-three 14th.

Only 16 players remained under par at Southern Hills, a list that included Webb Simpson. On Friday, he had to save par from a bunker on his final hole to make the cut on the number. In a tie for 64th at the start of the third round, Simpson shot a 65 and moved into a tie for 10th.

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He was eight shots back, seemingly too far to catch Pereira, but so little is known about how he will be react to the Sunday pressure of trying to win a major.

“If you play really good golf during the week, you’re going to win. Doesn’t matter your first time or your 10th time,” Pereira said. “If you play really, really well you’re, going to have chances.”

This is a big one.

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