ATLANTA — Kenny Perry already has had a week to remember at the Tour Championship.
He was honored with the Payne Stewart Award, which he called the greatest accomplishment of his career. He was so overcome by the stifling heat in the opening round at East Lake that he thought he might throw up after five holes and was lucky to shoot a 72.
How about this to top it off?
A two-shot lead going into Sunday, a final pairing with Tiger Woods, his entire family in town, and a chance to capture the Tour Championship, and maybe even the $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup.
“It might be magical,” Perry said Saturday. “We’ll see.”
His round Saturday was magical enough. Perry birdied the opening four holes — all on putts inside 8 feet — to quickly catch up to Woods, then kept bogeys off his card the rest of the way for a 6-under 64.
“Four birdies in a row puts you in a good mood is all I can say,” said Perry, who was at 8-under 202. “That set the tone for the day.”
Woods had a 12-foot birdie putt on the first hole that slid by the cup, and that set the tone for his day. He missed a half-dozen chances from 15 feet or under, yet his only significant birdies came on putts of 20 and 55 feet. The other was a two-putt on a par 5. He wound up with a 69, his eighth consecutive round in the 60s during the FedEx Cup playoffs, yet this one cost him the lead.
“I got fooled a few times there,” Woods said, confused by the slope and grain on the greens.
Perry has 14 career victories, yet only two of them has come with Woods in the field. Even with a two-shot lead, he is approaching Sunday as though he has nothing to lose. He even playfully challenged the world’s No. 1 player.
“Here I am at 49, I’m still trying to beat him,” Perry said. “I have fun with it. He’d better bring his ’A’ game is all I’ve got to say.”
For Perry to win the FedEx Cup, he would need a victory Sunday and for Woods to finish in a three-way tie for third or worse. That remains a possibility, given the players stacked up behind them.
Phil Mickelson continued to ooze confidence with his putter and shot a 4-under 66, suddenly believing he can make any putt whether it’s from 4 feet or 40 feet. He was at 4-under 206 along with Sean O’Hair (70), who was tied with Woods until pulling a tee shot into the water on the 17th to make double bogey.
Padraig Harrington, playing with Woods for the ninth time this year, stopping making birdies to offset his mistakes and shot a 71, leaving him at 207 with Steve Marino (67).
Steve Stricker, the No. 2 seed in the FedEx Cup standings behind Woods, got back into the picture, no matter how blurry, with a 66 and was six shots out of the lead.
“I needed to make a move today to have any sort of chance for tomorrow,” Stricker said. “At least I gave myself an opportunity. I’m going to need another one of those rounds, or maybe even lower.”
All of them would like the kind of day Perry enjoyed.
His start was flawless in the morning, under cloudy skies and the threat of rain that forced officials to move up the tee times. After pounding a driver, he hit sand wedge to 4 feet. Then came perhaps his best shot of the round, a 5-iron with that familiar draw that settled just outside 6 feet of the cup. Perry made birdie on the next two holes from short range, and quickly found himself tied for the lead.
It was Woods’ turn to catch up, but he never did.
He missed three birdie putts inside 12 feet on the front nine, and cost himself two other chances from the bunker — a fairway bunker on No. 7 that led to bogey, and a greenside bunker on the par-5 ninth that led to par.
“It was amazing how I had about four or five putts today that the grain was going up the hill, and I didn’t know which one to play. Do I play the grain or do I play the slope?” Woods said. “Just one of those days where I happened to be in some interesting little spots, even thought I had pretty makeable putts.”
Perry didn’t have that problem, and even the one time he was threatened with a bogey, he holed his par putt from about 10 feet.
Now, he is one more good round away from one the biggest wins of his career that couldn’t come at a better time. His mother is dying of cancer — Perry nearly missed the British Open when she took a turn for the worse — and his father’s health is fading. That’s one reason Perry put his son, Justin, on the bag over the last month.
His daughter took a break from SMU to join him this week, and his older daughter and son-in-law are coming for the final round.
“I’ll have the whole gang here,” Perry said. “I hope mom and dad will be watching. Hopefully, I can lift her spirits.”
All Woods is trying to do is lift the trophy, although he would like both trophies — the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup — that have been stationed on the first tee all week.
There’s a chance Perry can hoist one (Tour Championship) and Woods the other.
“I’d much rather just win the tournament, and the FedEx Cup will take care of itself,” Woods said. “As of right now, I’m two back and have an opportunity to win the tournament. And that’s what I’m going to focus on tomorrow.”
Golf
Perry races past Woods in Tour Championship
- Golf
-
-
McIlroy: Now I know I'm the best
Winning the U.S. Open last year didn't just earn Rory McIlroy his first major title, it made him believe he was ready to become the best player in the world.
-
Woods insists he’s close to regularly contending
Tiger Woods insists he is close to contending on a weekly basis, even if recent results suggest otherwise.
-
Dufner birdies way to lead at Byron Nelson
Standing over his ball in a swale behind the 18th green, Jason Dufner would have been content with a par and a spot in the big group tied for the lead in the Byron Nelson Championship.
-
Zach Johnson takes Players’ lead
After breaking 70 for the first time in seven weeks, Tiger Woods headed to the back of the practice range at the TPC Sawgrass to fine-tune his swing. That was much better than going to the clubhouse to clean out his locker.
-
McIlroy finding a balance in golf and life
Rory McIlroy went home to Northern Ireland after the Masters and left his clubs behind in Florida. He didn’t touch them again until he returned last week to start gearing up for a big summer that includes his title defense at the U.S. Open.
-
Nicklaus hasn’t forgotten his most magical shots
Now 72 years old, Jack Nicklaus jokes that he can’t remember what happened yesterday.
-
Bradley should be a lock for Presidents Cup
Until winning the PGA Championship, the coolest thing in golf that happened to Keegan Bradley during his amazing rookie season was getting a phone call from Fred Couples in May after he won his first PGA Tour event.
-
Gindlesberger leads Southern in opener
Billy Gindlesberger shot a one-over par 37 at Oakland Golf Club Tuesday to lead Southern to a season-opening tri-match win over Northern and Bishop Walsh in high school golf.
-
Those who know Woods’ game: He’s down, not out
The kid standing behind 15-year-old Tiger Woods on the tee at Torrey Pines was two years older and already a hotshot himself on Southern California’s rough-and-tumble amateur golf circuit the first time he saw the look.
-
Fowler part of 4-way tie as Woods falters
Rickie Fowler had eight birdies and an eagle to give himself another shot at winning. Adam Scott did well enough to stay in the lead. PGA Tour rookie Keegan Bradley got in on the action late.
- More Golf Headlines
-


