Seamus Power surges to the front at Butterfield Bermuda Championship on wind-swept day at Port Royal

After a couple of days of unusual weather, Port Royal bared its teeth as Seamus Power moved into a share of the lead alongside Ben Griffin at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Wind is the defence of a course that hugs the coast of the north Atlantic.

There was not a breath of wind on Thursday, meaning the course was at the mercy of the players, and it was a similar story on Friday morning.

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Schenk forgets clubs and misses flight, surges into contention in Bermuda

YESTERDAY AT 21:46

It got tough on Friday afternoon when a storm rolled in, and normal service was resumed on Saturday.

While the conditions were decidedly tougher compared to the opening two days – wind, rain or shine all came alike to Power.

For the third day in a row, the Irishman went round in 65 to get to 18-under for the tournament.

Third Round Leaderboard

  • T1. Seamus Power, 18-under
  • T1. Ben Griffin, 18-under
  • T3. Kevin Yu, 16-under
  • T3. Aaron Baddeley, 16-under
  • 5. Brian Gay, 15-under
  • T6. Greyson Sigg, 14-under
  • T6. Thomas Detry, 14-under

“Overall I was able to hang in there,” Power said. “I putted really well which was a huge bonus in wind like this and puts me in a good spot for tomorrow.”

Wind has never been a worry for a player who crafted his game on the Links courses of Ireland.

“You do your best to adapt to it,” Power said. “That is what you learn growing up in these conditions. Things are going to go wrong, but you try to hang in there, try to keep the ball in play and maybe a putt goes in here and there.”

Ben Griffin started the day one shot in front of Power, but his round of 66 allowed the Irishman to draw level.

McIlroy ‘proud’ after regaining World No. 1 spot with win at CJ Cup

Australian Aaron Baddeley’s last win on the PGA Tour came in 2016, but a round of 68 moved him to within two shots of the lead.

Brian Gay is another player who operates well in wind, and the short nature of the track plays to his strengths, and a third round of 66 of the week kept him in the hunt at 15-under.

Thomas Detry is one shot further adrift at 14-under, as he got round in 68 in extremely difficult conditions.

Russell Knox’s challenge came unstuck on Saturday, as he posted a one-over round of 72 to drop to eight-under.

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Detry starts well, Smotherman and Endycott lead way in Bermuda

27/10/2022 AT 21:48

Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Murray withdraws from Bermuda Championship due to injuries in road accident

27/10/2022 AT 18:37

Read the full article Here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

DON’T MISS OUT!
Subscribe To Newsletter
Be the first to get latest updates and exclusive content straight to your email inbox.
Stay Updated
Give it a try, you can unsubscribe anytime.
close-link