Chris Wood pulls clear of the pack after 69 in Majorca

Chris Wood remained on target to claim his first European Tour victory as he extended his lead at the Iberdrola Open to four shots with a third-round 69 in Majorca yesterday.

Wood will head into tomorrow's final round on nine under par - four shots clear of Shane Lowry and Darren Clarke. Lowry went round in 63 yesterday, equalling Gregory Bourdy's course record, while Clarke signed for his second straight level-par 70.

The closest 23-year-old Wood has come to a European Tour title was a play-off defeat to Louis Oosthuizen at the Africa Open earlier this year.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Despite holding a healthy lead going into the final day in Majorca, he felt he deserved better. "I have extended my lead by one, which is good, but it was pretty tough today and I thought that I played pretty well and didn't really get the rewards I deserved."

The Bristolian birdied the first and 10th before dropping a shot on the par-four 14th.

"I felt I was pretty flawless on the front nine today so I just need to do what I have been doing and hole a couple of more putts and I should be all right. It's pretty solid at the moment."

Lowry dragged himself into contention with his course-record equalling seven-under-par 63, the highlight of which was an eagle at the sixth. The Irishman, who burst onto the scene when he won the 2003 Irish Open as an amateur, identified his start as the main reason behind his impressive score.

"I was speaking to my coach and was saying that we have one of those courses here where you have to stay patient and plot your way round and hopefully the birdies will come," he said. "That's exactly what happened over the first two rounds and then I got off to a great start and was four under through six holes - I just have to wait and see how the leaders get on and see what I have to do."

Clarke, a 2010 Ryder Cup vice-captain, stayed tied for second after his round of 70 and the 12-times European Tour event winner was satisfied with his performance. "I played great and kept giving myself chance after chance and found myself with a very cold putter," he said. "The forecast is for strong winds so hopefully I can play the way I have been and the putter warms up a bit."

The 2012 Ryder Cup captain Jose Maria Olazabal, who designed the Majorca course, carded a 66 to move into fourth place - one shot behind Lowry and Clarke.

Related topics: