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World No. 1 Dustin Johnson moves atop RBC Heritage leaderboard
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — Dustin Johnson, known for length off the tee, showed off his precise ball-positioning and hot putter Saturday to take the RBC Heritage lead.
Johnson shot a 3-under 68 for a one-shot lead over Shane Lowry, Ian Poulter and Rory Sabbatini.
The top-ranked Johnson, a South Carolina native who had not played his home state's only PGA Tour stop for nine years before returning in 2018, seems to have found a home on Harbour Town Golf Links' narrow fairways and smallish greens. He had his sixth round in the 60s over the last two years to reach 10 under.
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"I'm really enjoying playing in it," Johnson said. "I really enjoyed playing in it last year after being away for so long. It's something I look forward to now. We have a really big fan base here and growing up in South Carolina definitely helps."
54-hole leader @DJohnsonPGA is in search of his 21st career PGA TOUR win.
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) April 20, 2019
He leads by 1 @RBC_Heritage.#LiveUnderPar pic.twitter.com/tQdbPFphoS
Lowry led the first 48 holes before making three bogeys on his final six holes in a 71. Poulter shot a 67, and Sabbatini had a 68.
Patrick Cantlay kept up his stellar weekend play and was two shots behind. Cantlay shot 64-68 last week at the Masters and had a 66 to lead a group of six at 8 under.
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Johnson, who's won 20 PGA Tour titles, showed off other parts of his game that sometimes get overlooked by his massive drives. He saved par out of the pine straw after a bad drive to the right and into the trees on the 12th hole, then made birdie on the par-5 15th after putting his tee shot in the woods. He hit just five of 14 fairways, yet had only 25 putts.
"The course played tough. It was very challenging," he said. "It was tough getting balls close to the hole."
So Johnson just made a bunch of long putts. He had a 20-footer for birdie on the sixth hole and a 19-footer for birdie on the 13th. The highlight came at No. 14 when Johnsondropped a 47-foot bomb that caught the lip of the cup and rolled almost all the way around before dropping.
@DJohnsonPGA is putting circles on the scorecard. #QuickHits pic.twitter.com/Xuo76pv124
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) April 20, 2019
Was there some secret to Johnson's play?
"No," he said, "they just went in."
If he can keep it up Sunday, Johnson will become just the second South Carolina born player to win the RBC Heritage, joining friend and one-time Dutch Fork High golf teammate Wesley Bryan, who became the first to do it two years ago.
Johnson won the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship in February and tied for second last week in the Masters.
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Lowry was the steadiest of anyone for the first 2 1/2 rounds and held a three-stroke lead over Johnson entering the back nine before faltering. The Irishman came up short on a sand shot on the 13th hole and took bogey. He put his tee shot into the water on the par-3 14th for a second straight bogey. Two holes later, Lowry added his third bogey after going the first 48 holes with just one.
"Even making those bogeys, it was the best I've been in a while (to stay in position for a victory)," he said.
Lowry was among 56 competitors who had to finish the rain-delayed second round in the morning.
Poulter is seeking a bit of payback on Harbour Town after last year. He was the 54-hole leader with three sub-70 rounds before ballooning to a 75 on Sunday. He opened his third round this time with a double-bogey 6, but rallied with six birdies the rest of the way to stay close.
Who’s making a run? #RBCHeritage
— RBC Heritage (@RBC_Heritage) April 20, 2019
Leaderboard https://t.co/meAjxGWoFy pic.twitter.com/gMXX8oC9Lw
Sabbatini strung together nine straight pars to close his round.
Cantlay bounced back after putting up a 72 in the second round with a bogey-free round. He said he's kept the good mindset he had with his play at Augusta National last week.
"Playing that well on the weekend was obviously huge," he said. "I feel like I usually play well and close strong."
This article was written by Pete Iacobelli from The Associated Press and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.