Mexican birdie machine Abraham Ancer has burst from the pack to seize command of the Australian Open after a drama-charged third round in Sydney.
No less than eight players topped the leaderboard at various stages on Saturday on the windswept Lakes layout, but it was Ancer who had all the answers in a brilliant, equal-tournament-best 7-under 65 that rocketed him five shots clear of the field at 13-under for the championship.
The 27-year-old rated his round the best of his career — “given the conditions”.
“It was a tough round. I knew it was going to blow all day so I had to stay patient,” Ancer said.
“It was a very challenging round but everything went my way and, whenever something didn’t go my way, I managed to make at most a bogey which, out here, was pretty good.”
Japanese amateur Keita Nakajima is Ancer’s closest pursuer at 8-under after a steady round of 70 soured somewhat by a bogey on the last.
Marcus Fraser — the winding-back veteran who proposed scrapping Open prize money pre-tournament — returned a 71 to be a further shot back in a tie for third with American star Keegan Bradley (71).
Bradley’s fellow American Matt Kuchar three-putted the last in a 73 to fall to 6-under, alongside Australian trio Aaron Pike (67), Cameron Percy (72) and Dimitrios Papadatos (71).
Bidding to become the first Mexican to claim the Stonehaven Cup, Ancer assumed control with five-successive birdies from the sixth to 10th holes as his rivals unravelled.
No one imploded worse than joint halfway leaders Max McCardle and Byeong Hun An.
McCardle opened both nines with dreaded double bogeys in a three-over 75 that left the former mechanic and Adelaide airport worker at five under and eight shots adrift of the runaway leader.
And after lighting up the Lakes on Friday with a hole in one, An was unable to find any such magic on Saturday — a double-bogey six on the 13th after needing three chips to find the green the low point in a horror round of 76.
The South Korean will start Sunday’s final round nine shots off the pace.
Defending champion Cameron Davis, having fired the third-best round of the day, a 4-under 68, to drag himself into red figures for the first time all tournament, is 10 back.
After reeling in Jason Day from six behind last year at The Australian, Davis will need a golfing miracle on Sunday to catch Ancer, who had rattled off nine birdies in all on a moving day not lacking controversy either.
Rising Queenslander Jake McLeod thought he’d captured the outright lead on the fourth hole, only for last week’s NSW Open winner to be penalised one stroke for waiting too long for his birdie putt to drop.
Officials deemed that McLeod waited 15 seconds for the ball to drop into the cup, when players are permitted only 10 seconds.
The 24-year-old remonstrated with rules officials after being docked a shot — and thus recording a par — claiming the ball was still moving.
It was determined that McLeod would get the chance to discuss the incident after the completion of his round before a final assessment, but, as it stood, McLeod posted a 75 to fall to four under par for the Open.