South African Dean Burmester will go into the final round of LIV Golf Miami two shots behind the leader, Sergio Garcia.
Garcia, the Fireballs GC captain, shot a four-under 68 to move to nine under, good enough for a two-stroke lead at Trump National Doral.
His closest pursuers are Stinger GC’s Burmester, Smash GC’s Talor Gooch, Legion XIII’s Tyrrell Hatton, RangeGoats GC’s Matthew Wolff.
Burmester’s Stinger teammate, Louis Oosthuizen, is among a group a further shot behind.
Legion XIII tops the team leaderboard at 21 under thanks to Kieran Vincent’s 66, Hatton’s 67 and captain Jon Rahm’s 70. They lead the RangeGoats by three shots while seeking their second win of their inaugural season as a LIV Golf expansion team.
Garcia has played so many competitive rounds on the Blue Monster during his legendary career that there are no longer any surprises. He hopes that experience will pay off Sunday with his first win on the iconic course – and his first win in the LIV Golf League.
Having been involved in two LIV Golf individual playoffs that didn’t go his way – including the epic into-the-darkness four-hole battle again Joaquin Niemann in this year’s season opener at Mayakoba – Garcia would love to avoid extra holes on Sunday and wrap up the tournament in regulation.
“At the end of the day, you’ve just got to keep giving yourself chances,” said Garcia, who has 36 career professional wins, the last one in 2020.
“I’m trying my hardest out there every time. I’m trying my best. Sometimes my best is really good, sometimes my best is not quite as good.
“Hopefully tomorrow, my best will be really good, and we’ll be able to get it done. If not, we’ll just keep working at it.”
Garcia made his first professional start at Doral in 2002 and has a couple of third-place finishes to show for it.
His bogey-free 67 on Friday matched his lowest score on the Blue Monster, and he followed it with a Saturday performance that started with an approach shot that banged off the flagstick on his opening hole and included his only bogey of the tournament on his 29th hole played.
“Guess we’ve seen it throughout all these years, so we know a little bit more or less what to expect,” Garcia said. “But it’s the kind of golf course that you have to hit good shots. If you don’t, it’s tough.”
Garcia isn’t alone in seeking his first LIV Golf victory.
Of the top 12 players on the leaderboard, the only one who has lifted a LIV Golf individual trophy is Gooch, who won three times last year en route to claiming the season-long Individual Championship.
He doubts that gives him any kind of edge over the other contenders on Sunday – “I haven’t looked at the leaderboard, but I’m betting a few of those dudes have won Major championships and Ryder Cups,” he said – but he does have confidence in his ability to successfully navigate a tense and compact final-round leaderboard.
“It’s nice to have won that much recently,” said Gooch, who is seeking his first LIV Golf win on American soil after all three wins last year overseas. “That’s confidence-boosting for sure.”
Like Garcia, Burmester and Wolff have sniffed around the leaderboard a couple of times since joining LIV Golf. Both are among the league’s biggest hitters, so it’s no surprise they’re in contention on a course that measures 7,701 yards. Neither player had seen the course until they joined LIV Golf.
“It’s not called the Blue Monster for nothing,” said Burmester, whose round of 69 included four birdies and a bogey. “It’s tough. There’s not one golf shot you stand there and think, man, I’ve actually got a chance.”
Wolff finished fourth earlier this year in Las Vegas in just his second start after RangeGoats Captain Bubba Watson acquired him in a trade for Gooch. Now he’s in Sunday’s final group with Gooch and trying to catch Garcia.
“Winning is really hard to do,” Wolff said. “Anytime you have the opportunity to be in contention or win is definitely something to be proud of.”
Photo: Scott Taetsch/LIV Golf