Jordan Spieth storms five clear in Hawaii with closing eagle

World No 1 inches away from making albatross two on 18th on way to carding 65

Jordan Spieth chips on to the eighth green  during the third round of the Hyundai Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club in Lahaina, Hawaii. Photograph: Sam Greenwood/Getty Images
Jordan Spieth chips on to the eighth green during the third round of the Hyundai Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club in Lahaina, Hawaii. Photograph: Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

Jordan Spieth closed in on his seventh PGA Tour victory as he hit an exquisite three-iron to eagle the par-five last and seize a five-stroke lead after the third round of the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in Hawaii on Saturday.

The American world number one struck a laser-like second shot from 250 yards at the 18th, his ball bouncing from short of the green to narrowly miss the flagstick and end up 10 feet past the hole from where he coolly drained the eagle putt.

That gave Spieth a superb eight-under-par 65 and a 24-under total of 195 after 54 holes at the Kapalua Resort, despite not being at his pinpoint best with his iron play for much of a blustery day on the Hawaiian island of Maui.

“I just tried to put a smooth swing on it,” Spieth, 22, told Golf Channel about his three-iron approach at the last. “It came across the hole and took a peek, I guess (at dropping in).

READ MORE

“It was really nice to get that putt to go in. I think I deserved it on this hole and it gives me a nice little confidence boost into tomorrow.”

Fellow American Brooks Koepka was alone in second after shooting a best-of-the-week 63, with defending champion Patrick Reed a further stroke back at 18 under par after pocketing four birdies in the last five holes for a 67.

Spieth, who would match Tiger Woods with a seventh PGA win before the age of 23 should he triumph on Sunday, was delighted to rebound from a poor stretch of holes from the short eighth, which he bogeyed after missing the green.

“I’m extremely pleased, especially the way we bounced back after that stretch eight through 11,” the Masters and US Open champion said after a round that also included seven birdies.

“It started to look like I was slapping it around a bit. I just needed one thing to go my way there and I got that long putt on 12 (from 50 feet), then all of a sudden we turned things around on the easy holes.”

Spieth is also on track to beat the tournament record of 31 under set by Ernie Els in 2003 but he is wary of the final-round challenge posed by compatriots Koepka and Reed, who have both displayed brilliant golf at Kapalua this week.

“Brooks shot 10 under today, and that’s insane,” said Spieth. “I’m going to have to go out and make some birdies. I’ve got to expect Brooks and Patrick to shoot eight or nine under tomorrow.”

Pádraig Harrington carded a three-under 70 to move to 11 under and a share of 12th spot, while Graeme McDowell is towards the rear of the select field, a one-under 72 leaving him on two under.