• Kim takes one-shot lead at RBC Heritage

    Si Woo Kim 19 Apr 2025 Jared C Tilton Getty Images
    Si Woo Kim

    South Korean Kim Si-woo fired a five-under 66 on Saturday to seize a one-shot lead over Justin Thomas and Andrew Novak after 54 holes at the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage in South Carolina.

    Kim, a four-time PGA Tour winner, had six birdies through 15 holes, pushing his lead to as many as three before a bogey at the par-four 18th where overnight leader Thomas birdied to pull within one.

    “I played great,” Kim said. “Only missed the last hole so that’s not a big deal. I played pretty much 35 holes really decent, so I’m not going to worry about the last hole for tomorrow.”

    Kim, who says he’s trying to use his failure to book a Masters berth for the first time since 2017 as motivation, had started the day two adrift and started motoring up the leaderboard with birdies at the 1st and 2nd.

    He added two more at the 5th and 9th – where he got up and down from a greenside bunker – and built his lead with birdies at 13 and 15, where he rolled in a 19-foot putt that he called his most important shot of the day.

    But he was poorly positioned in the 18th fairway, his second shot landing on the bank of the hazard. He fired out to six feet, but after Thomas drilled his 15-foot birdie putt Kim missed his par effort to finish with a 15-under-par total of 198.

    “I’m in a good position,” Kim said. “I’ve been playing good. Especially iron play is really good for this week. Yeah, just one more day left.”

    Thomas, chasing his first victory since he won his second PGA Championship crown in 2022, had four birdies, but two back-nine bogeys had him three back before his birdie at the last saw him complete a two-under 69 to join Novak on 14-under 199.

    “It was huge,” Thomas said of his closing birdie. “I played really well today, really solid, just didn’t have much to show.”

    The birdie capped an eventful round that included a par at the 2nd, where he was assessed a one-stroke penalty when his ball moved as he removed a loose impediment from a waste area.

    He ended up covered in mud when he opted to play out of shallow water on the way to a bogey at 11.

    “The course is getting very difficult, very firm and fast,” Thomas said. “It was nice to see an iron shot get up there pin high and roll that putt [at 18] in there.”

    Novak, chasing his first PGA Tour title, had five birdies in a five-under-par 66 to put himself in contention in the $20-million signature event at Harbour Town Golf Links.

    “It was really solid,” Novak said. “Played kind of boring golf. I thought there were a decent amount of tough pins out there today, pins you couldn’t really go at.

    “So I just made sure, on the par holes, to leave myself in the right spots. When I had a chance at birdies, I did a pretty good job of taking care of most of them.”

    American Maverick McNealy was alone in fourth after a 65 for 13-under 200.

    Brian Harman, the 2023 Open champion, had six birdies before a bogey at 18 in a five-under-par 66 that left him on 12 under, tied with England’s Tommy Fleetwood who signed for a 68.

    World No 1 and defending champion Scottie Scheffler was tied on 11-under 202 with fellow American Russell Henley.

    Christiaan Bezuidenhout, the only South African in the field, carded 74 to share 66th on one-over 214, with three birdies, four bogeys and a double-bogey.

    © Agence France-Presse

    Photo: Jared C Tilton/Getty Images

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