GREENSBORO, N.C. — Tiger Woods couldn’t have asked for much more at his first Wyndham Championship.
He’s playing with confidence. His scores show it. Now, he’ll play a Sunday round that matters.
Woods shot a 2-under-par 68 in the third round on Saturday, leaving him two strokes behind leader and longtime friend Jason Gore in a three-way tie for second.
Gore shot a career-best 62 to reach 15-under 195 at Sedgefield Country Club.
“I need to go out there tomorrow and make a run and get myself up there and make some birdies,” Woods said. “There’s a bunch of guys … at 13 [under]. There’s a whole slew of guys at 12, 11, 10. Anybody can make a run and shoot the score Jason and Jonas [Blixt] did.”
Woods — whose streak of 28 holes without a bogey ended on the 18th when his six-foot par putt lipped out — reeled off 10 consecutive pars before briefly moving within one stroke of Gore with a birdie on the par-3 16th.
“I felt very steady from the word ’go,’” Woods said.
Blixt and Scott Brown joined Woods at 13 under. Blixt shot a career-best 62, and Brown had a 66.
Former Wyndham winners Webb Simpson (64) and Brandt Snedeker (67) were three strokes back, along with Paul Casey (66), Jim Herman (66) and Cameron Percy (67).
Woods was poised to make a run at his first win in more than two years — one that would earn him enough points to clinch a spot in the FedEx Cup playoffs opener next week in New Jersey. Depending on the math, a solo second-place finish also might be enough for Woods, who’s at No. 187.
“I think it’s awesome to see him playing well again, to see him playing like Tiger Woods,” Gore said, “because that’s what we all want to see.”
He also moved one step closer to his 80th PGA Tour victory — and first since the Bridgestone Invitational in 2013.
Playing the Wyndham for the first time in an effort to hone his game and earn a spot in The Barclays, Woods is attempting to win a tournament in his first try for the first time since 1999, when he won the Cadillac Championship in Spain.
For him, this day was about consistently making pars — 15 in all, including a remarkable save on the 10th with a 24-foot putt.
“The putter just felt really good. My pace, I felt like I could be aggressive,” Woods said. “I took a few runs at putts and ripped them past the hole, but I never felt like I was going to miss any of them. I took a rip at them. Some I made, some I didn’t.”
His only birdie on the back nine was an important one. He plopped his tee shot on 16 about 12 feet from the hole and rolled in the putt to move to 14 under before giving that stroke back on his final hole.
That bogey prevented a final Sunday pairing with Gore — who was instead paired with Blixt. Gore says he’s known Woods “since we’ve been 12 years old” as kids in California.
Gore started the round six strokes off the lead. He took over the top spot at 14 under with a birdie on the 15th, then closed with another on the 18th — hitting his second shot to seven feet to set up his ninth birdie of the day.
At No. 166 on the points list, Gore put himself in position for his second career win on tour and his first since the 84 Lumber Classic in 2005. He has just 15 top-10 finishes in the past decade.
“Contrary to popular belief,” Gore quipped, “I’m still a good golfer.”
His big round came in relative anonymity because once again, an overflow crowd followed Woods’ every move.
Woods began the day sharing the lead with rookie Tom Hoge at 11 under, but claimed sole possession for the first time with a birdie on the first hole.
Blixt joined him at 12 under moments later, then jumped ahead with a birdie on the 17th. Woods caught him by rolling in a five-foot birdie putt on the fifth before Gore shot past them both.
Still, Blixt has given himself a shot to make the playoffs and earn his tour card for next year. He’s at No. 135 on the points list and No. 147 on the money list, and said he’d be “very pleased if I secured my job.
“A win will take care of that,” he added. “Shoot another 62, I should have a good chance.”
Erik Compton, a two-time heart transplant recipient who shared the first-round lead, withdrew before his third round with an injured left ankle but says he’s hopeful of playing in The Barclays.
Had he pulled out a day earlier, the cut line would have moved to 2 under and 19 more players — including bubble players Michael Putnam (No. 134) and Tom Gillis (No. 138) — would still be around this weekend.
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