
Masters 2015 Leaderboard: Saturday Scores, Standings and Results
Jordan Spieth will enter Sunday’s final round at the Masters with a chance to win his first green jacket in historic fashion.
Spieth posted a round of 70 on moving day that placed him 16 under par for the tournament and with a chance to break the 72-hole scoring record at Augusta National currently held by Tiger Woods.
He already has the 36 and 54-hole scoring records to his credit.
Woods dominated the 1997 tournament, finishing at 18-under and 12 shots clear of runner-up Tom Kite.
But he was only 15 under par after 54 holes, a mark eclipsed by Spieth this year.
Amazing as his run has been, the path to a first Major title is still not quite a lock.
The rest of the field, including the man whose record he has in the crosshairs, isn’t willing to just give it away.
Woods, perhaps putting to rest the ghosts of his sub-par performances in recent years, reminded everyone on Saturday of why he’s still one of the all-time greats.
Tiger isn't likely to win this weekend, but he did fire a four-under round to pull himself six under par for the tournament.
With serious questions about whether he’d even make the weekend or once again withdraw early, this has to be considered a major step in the right direction for the four-time champion at Augusta.
Justin Rose and Phil Mickelson remain the largest threats to Spieth’s ability to go wire-to-wire.
Rose has been strong on the back nine all week.
He played the second half of the course five-under Saturday to move into sole possession of second place at 12 under par and four strokes off the lead.
Lefty mixed seven birdies with a couple of bogeys for a five-under round that dropped him to 11 under par for the tournament.
Is a four-shot lead heading to the final round insurmountable? It’s close, but crazier things have happened at Augusta on Sunday.
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