This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2017, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.
Farmington • By now, the story is not so much that someone tied the course record in the third round of the Utah Championship. The real news is that Jacques Blaauw's 61 was all he needed to move into a tie for the lead.
With inexperienced players teeing off in the day's last twosome and Oakridge Country Club becoming tougher as Saturday went along, the leading score moved only from 16 under par to 18 under in the third round of the $700,000 Web.com Tour event presented by Zions Bank.
Long after Blaauw finished his round, having jumped from a tie for 28th place with eight birdies and an eagle, Rob Oppenheim caught him with a 20-foot, downhill birdie putt on No. 18. They will enter Sunday's final round one stroke ahead of Denny McCarthy, who missed a short birdie try on the last hole, with Andrew Landry another shot behind.
Saturday became a struggle for Christian Brand, who went from 61 in the second round to 70 in the third round, and Kyle Wilshire, who lost his 36-hole lead and much more by going from 62 to 74. Nobody would have imagined 18 under leading after Saturday, the way the numbers were trending through two days.
"At the start of the day, I wouldn't have thought that," Oppenheim said, "but after being out there, I can see why."
Oppenheim overcame two bogeys to post a 5-under-par 66, the lowest score of anyone who played in Saturday's last six twosomes while earlier starters were posting a 61, 62 and 63.
Oakridge's greens became firmer, faster and "kind of baked out" in the 100-degree temperatures of the late afternoon, Oppenheim said. Brand and Wilshire felt the heat in multiple ways, with the opportunity to save their seasons. Brand made four straight bogeys in the middle of the round, but steadied himself enough to finish in a tie for fifth place, three strokes back.
But now he only shares the course record with Blaauw, a 31-year-old South African who summarized his year by saying, "When I make the cut, I play well. Obviously, [I've] just got to get to the weekend."
No kidding. Blaauw has placed in the top 10 twice this season, while missing the cut in his other 10 previous starts. Blaauw and Oppenheim each could clinch a PGA Tour card with a victory Sunday, worth $126,000.
Oppenheim has made barely more than $50,000 on the Web.com Tour in 2017. That's not counting the $216,000 he earned for a tie for eighth in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in February, playing via a sponsor exemption. The Massachusetts native played in the same foursome with New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick for three rounds on Monterey Peninsula, creating a memorable experience with one qualifier: That money is spendable, but not helpful in his bid to return to the PGA Tour.
He knows as well as anyone how every dollar matters. Competing in the Web.com Tour Finals last fall, trying to regain his PGA Tour access, he finished $392 short.
Oppenheim, 37, is a Web.com Tour veteran with a 2015 victory among his credentials, but he never has played in the last twosome on Sunday. He's also aware that with all of the low-60s scores that have been shot at Oakridge this week, the final round is unlikely to become a duel between him and Blaauw, as they tee off at 3 p.m. That's because 15 players are within four shots of the lead.
"I'm happy to be where I am," Oppenheim said, "but I know I've got to go low again."
kkragthorpe@sltrib.com Twitter: @tribkurt
Saturday's scores
Web.com – Utah Championship
At Oakridge Country Club
Farmington, Utah
Purse: $700,000
Yardage: 7,045; Par 71
Third Round
Jacques Blaauw 66-68-61 195
Rob Oppenheim 66-63-66 195
Denny McCarthy 69-63-64 196
Andrew Landry 68-65-64 197
Nicholas Thompson 65-71-62 198
Adam Schenk 65-67-66 198
Ben Silverman 66-67-65 198
Brice Garnett 64-65-69 198
Christian Brand 67-61-70 198
Austin Cook 67-69-63 199
Michael Johnson 69-66-64 199
Mark Anguiano 68-65-66 199
Blake Adams 68-64-67 199
Adam Long 67-65-67 199
Luke Guthrie 67-65-67 199
Brandon Harkins 66-70-64 200
Jon Curran 68-68-64 200
Mark Hensby 67-68-65 200
Michael Arnaud 67-68-65 200
Nate Lashley 67-68-65 200
Peter Lonard 70-65-65 200
Bo Hoag 67-68-65 200
Matt Atkins 62-73-65 200
Wes Roach 64-70-66 200
Tom Lovelady 65-68-67 200
John Chin 68-65-67 200
Billy Kennerly 66-66-68 200
Tyler Duncan 63-66-71 200
Kyle Wilshire 64-62-74 200
Beau Hossler 68-68-65 201
Dawie van der Walt 68-68-65 201
Greg Yates 72-64-65 201
Zack Fischer 67-69-65 201
Tommy Gainey 67-68-66 201
Jeff Gove 68-67-66 201
Vince Covello 66-69-66 201
Jason Gore 67-67-67 201
Roberto Diaz 66-68-67 201
Sam Ryder 67-65-69 201
Jim Knous 67-65-69 201
Abraham Ancer 67-63-71 201
Taylor Moore 66-63-72 201
Roger Sloan 67-69-66 202
Ben Taylor 67-69-66 202
David Skinns 65-70-67 202
Anders Albertson 67-68-67 202
Alexandre Rocha 69-66-67 202
Erik Barnes 70-64-68 202
Jimmy Gunn 69-65-68 202
Zecheng Dou 66-67-69 202
Michael Gellerman 65-68-69 202
James Driscoll 62-68-72 202
Ben J. Campbell 70-66-67 203
Max Rottluff 68-68-67 203
Carlos Ortiz 68-67-68 203
Blake D. Trimble 69-66-68 203
Andrew Yun 67-68-68 203
Samuel Del Val 67-65-71 203
Scott Gutschewski 67-69-68 204
Brian Davis 66-69-69 204
Byron Smith 66-68-70 204
D.H. Lee 66-67-71 204
Greg Eason 69-63-72 204
Michael Letzig 69-67-69 205
Jeremy Paul 68-68-69 205
Andrew Putnam 69-66-70 205
Sepp Straka 67-68-70 205
Dan Woltman 68-66-71 205
Charlie Saxon 70-64-71 205
Lanto Griffin 66-65-74 205
Aaron Wise 70-66-70 206
Corey Conners 66-70-70 206
Scott Harrington 66-70-70 206
Kurt Kitayama 69-65-72 206
Chris Naegel 70-66-71 207
Matt Harmon 66-68-74 208
Max Marsico 66-69-76 211