Hideki Matsuyama overtakes Ryo Hisatsune for Phoenix Open lead

Hideki Matsuyama overtakes Ryo Hisatsune for Phoenix Open lead

Hideki Matsuyama and Ryo Hisatsune played in the final group at the WM Phoenix Open together on Saturday, and it was set up for the Japanese countrymen to do the same on Sunday.

Field Level Media

One missed putt at the end of the day changed those plans.

Matsuyama overtook Hisatsune for the lead after three rounds when Hisatsune bogeyed the last hole Saturday at TPC Scottsdale in Arizona.

Hisatsune, 23, led his more-accomplished peer by one stroke through two rounds. Matsuyama's 3-under-par 68 propelled him to a 13-under 200 through three rounds while Hisatsune's late blunder led him to a round of 70.

"Yeah, it was a great day today. Kind of a first today for Japan to have two Japanese pros play in a final group," Matsuyama said through a translator. "I was hoping we could do it tomorrow, but, again, I hope tomorrow just to play well and stay on top."

Hisatsune, meanwhile, dropped into a four-way tie at 12-under with Maverick McNealy (65), Denmark's Nicolai Hojgaard (65) and South Korea's Si Woo Kim (66). The final threesome to go off Sunday will be Matsuyama, McNealy and Hojgaard.

Matsuyama and Hisatsune were tied at 13 under after Hisatsune birdied Nos. 10 and 17 to catch up. Matsuyama parred No. 18 and Hisatsune escaped a greenside bunker, leaving himself 5 1/2 feet to save par.

But Hisatsune's putt started left and stayed left, missing the cup altogether for a difficult bogey.

Hisatsune later said it was "special" to play alongside the 33-year-old Matsuyama, who became the first Japanese man to win a major when he captured the 2021 Masters.

"You know, he's like won Masters and then like 11 times PGA winner, so like very different for me," Hisatsune said. "But more chasing Hideki tomorrow, like going to also today as well."

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Two of those PGA Tour wins for Matsuyama were the 2016 and 2017 Phoenix Opens. Matsuyama brushed that off Saturday by saying this is a "brand-new tournament," and he had a funny response to a follow-up about what he likes about TPC Scottsdale.

"I like this course because even if I miss a fairway, I can still find my ball," he said. "Unless it's in the cactuses."

Matsuyama mixed three birdies and two bogeys over his first five holes Saturday. He took over the lead with an 11-foot birdie putt at the par-4 10th, and he added his last birdie at the par-5 13th.

Hojgaard, 24, is a three-time winner in Europe seeking his first PGA Tour victory. His bogey-free round was buoyed by five birdies in the closing six holes.

"It's easy to then go out and hunt the birdies a little bit, but I stayed patient, hitting into the right zones and hit some really, really good shots coming in and capitalized with some birdies, so it was a great way to finish," Hojgaard said.

Then there's McNealy, who at 30 is seeking his second PGA Tour title. He ranks second this week in greens in regulation (44 of 54) and made eight birdies Saturday. A bogey at the par-4 17th kept him from a share of the lead through 54 holes.

"You have to take every hole as it comes," McNealy said about an aggressive approach to Sunday. "If you hit the fairway, you can be aggressive if you have the right number. Miss the fairway, you just can't shoot yourself out of the tournament and make soft bogeys."

England's Matt Fitzpatrick held a share of the lead after consecutive birdies at Nos. 14-15, but he made a mess of the par-3 16th "Stadium Hole" and recorded a double bogey. A birdie-bogey finish left him at 67 for his round and tied at 11 under with Michael Thorbjornsen (65), Jake Knapp (66) and Akshay Bhatia (67).

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler posted a 67 that featured a chip-in birdie from the sand at No. 10. He's five off the pace at 8 under entering Sunday.

--Field Level Media

 

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