HONOLULU — Stephan Jaeger had nine birdies for the lowest round this week at Waialae, and two of the most important holes for him Saturday in the Sony Open were pars.
Jaeger knows dropping a shot is losing ground, and the way the Sony Open is playing out, no one can afford to do that at a tournament that is wide open going into the final round.
J.J. Spaun twice responded to bogeys with birdies in the closing stretch at Waialae, the last one a pitch-and-putt on the par-5 18th that gave him a 5-under 65 and a one-shot lead over Jaeger, Eric Cole (67) and Patrick Fishburn (68).
Jaeger had a 62 that included a birdie putt from just under 60 week on No. 8, his 17th hole. But he thought back to the bunker shot on the par-3 fourth to 2 feet to save par, and another bunker shot on the par-3 seventh and a 6-foot par save.
''I had just made two birdies the previous holes, and I hit it in the bunker, and I hit the bunker shot close so I didn't really have to grind very hard,'' Jaeger said. ''But to make par there kind of kept the momentum going, and I birdied a couple holes after that.''
Spaun was at 13-under 197, and there were 14 players within three shots of his lead.
That's usually the case at the Sony Open. This old-school course with its doglegs and deep bunkers and unpredictable Bermuda rough has a way of staying bunched until the very end.
Jaeger is best known for his Houston Open win over Scottie Scheffler during Scheffler's most dominant part of a dominant year. He was six shots behind going into the third round. He also had 40 players between him and the two players atop the leaderboard.