Masterpiece from Hideki Matsuyama secures four-shot lead at Augusta National

AP photo by Gregory Bull / Hideki Matsuyama hits to the third green during the third round of the Masters on Saturday in Augusta, Ga. Matsuyama shot a 65 to take a four-stroke lead into the final round and is trying to become Japan's first major champion in men's golf.
AP photo by Gregory Bull / Hideki Matsuyama hits to the third green during the third round of the Masters on Saturday in Augusta, Ga. Matsuyama shot a 65 to take a four-stroke lead into the final round and is trying to become Japan's first major champion in men's golf.

AUGUSTA, Ga. - The storms that stopped play for a little more than an hour Saturday at the Masters were expected. The masterpiece delivered by Hideki Matsuyama after the break was not.

Matsuyama played the final eight holes in 6-under par, turning a two-shot deficit into a four-shot lead. With four flawless swings and three putts late on the back nine at Augusta National Golf Club, he went from part of a logjam on the leaderboard to the cusp of becoming the first Japanese player to win a major championship in men's golf.

The final touch was a superb par save from 25 yards behind the 18th green for a 7-under 65, the only bogey-free round through the first three days at this year's Masters.

"I wouldn't have believed it," Matsuyama said through his interpreter. "But I did play well today. And my game plan was carried out, and hopefully tomorrow I can continue good form."

It all started in his car, where the 29-year-old waited out the storm delay. Part of the time was spent playing on his phone. He also thought about his previous shot, a drive into trees right of the 11th fairway.

"During the rain delay, I just figured I can't hit anything worse than that," Matsuyama said. "And so maybe it relieved some pressure. I don't know. But I did hit it well coming in."

Matsuyama was at 11-under 205, four shots clear of England's Justin Rose (72) - who himself was ahead by four after a first-round 65 and had a one-stroke edge after the second day - Australia's Marc Leishman (70), Masters rookie Will Zalatoris (71) and Xander Schauffele (68), the 27-year-old American who was one of the runners-up to Tiger Woods at Augusta in 2019.

It was 10 years ago when Matsuyama first played in the Masters as the Asia-Pacific Amateur winner. He learned then he could handle Augusta as the only amateur to make the cut in 2011, finishing with the same score (1-under 287) as Phil Mickelson, who had won the green jacket for a third time one year earlier.

Now comes the real test.

"If Hideki plays well, he can control his own destiny, I guess," said the 37-year-old Leishman, whose best Masters finish was a tie for fourth eight years ago. "But a lot can happen around here. I've seen what can happen. I've had bad rounds here myself, and I've had good rounds. You can make up four shots fairly quickly, but you have to do a lot of things right to do that."

Matsuyama did just about everything right, starting with his first shot after the delay - a 7-iron he punched under the trees and onto an 11th green slightly slowed by the moisture to 20 feet for birdie.

After his birdie from 10 feet on the 12th, Augusta National came to life. Imagine the roars if there had been a full capacity of spectators.

In a sequence that took no more than two minutes, Schauffele ran in a 60-foot eagle putt across the 15th green to momentarily tie for the lead at 7 under; back on the 12th, Rose made a 25-foot putt for his first birdie since the second hole, giving him the lead at 8 under.

That lasted as long as it took Matsuyama to cash in on his 5-iron to the 15th by making a five-foot eagle putt to reach 9 under, his first time in the lead. And no one could keep up.

"I've been playing with the lead the whole week, and obviously there's been an hour where Hideki has sort of moved out there in front," Rose said. "All the guys chasing at 7-under par are all capable of that little run Hideki has had. So it's all up for grabs tomorrow."

Baylor School graduate Harris English (73) was tied for 38th at 2 over. He had a bogey on the fourth hole and doubles on the first and fifth, but he made a birdie on the eighth and had three in a row starting on No. 15. The Georgia native's best finish at Augusta was a tie for 42nd in 2016, his second appearance and his most recent until this year.

Matsuyama followed his charge to the top with an 8-iron to five feet to the front right shelf on the par-3 16th for a birdie, and his pitching wedge to the back pin on the 17th had enough spin to settle 10 feet from the hole for another.

Canada's Corey Conners had a hole-in-one on No. 6 in a 68 and was alone in sixth at 6-under 210. Three-time major champion Jordan Spieth was within two shots of the lead despite a double bogey on the seventh hole, but he couldn't keep pace and shot 72 to fall six shots behind, alone in seventh.

Matsuyama will play in the final group with Schauffele, a comfortable pairing. Schauffele's mother was raised in Japan, and he speaks enough Japanese to have shared a few laughs with Matsuyama during Saturday's pairing.

That won't eliminate all the pressure. A major is on the line, and no course is more capable of serving up Sunday surprises than this one.

Matsuyama's lone shot at a major title was the 2017 PGA Championship, where he was one shot behind with three holes to play and missed a crucial par putt. He was in tears after that round, a player under enormous pressure in golf-mad Japan.

Matsuyama wasn't the first Japanese star of his generation - that was close friend Ryo Ishikawa - but he is by far the most accomplished. Matsuyama has 14 worldwide wins, five on the PGA Tour. He has reached as high as No. 2 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

He rarely can go anywhere on the PGA Tour without a dozen or more members of the Japanese media following. Their numbers are limited this year because of COVID-19 travel restrictions.

"Being in front of the media is still difficult. It's not my favorite thing to do," Matsuyama said through his interpreter. "It's been a lot less stress for me. I've enjoyed this week."

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