Stenson takes 4-shot lead at East Lake
Stenson takes 4-shot lead at East Lake
Tiger Woods, the No. 1 seed, was at 3-over 213, 14 shots behind in a tie for 26th.

Atlanta: Henrik Stenson was so flawless that he built a nine-shot lead at the turn in the Tour Championship on Saturday. Four bogeys in the rain on the back nine at East Lake put him right back where he started the day and injected some hope for the rest of the field.

Stenson made two bogeys on the last three holes - he made a 12-foot par putt on the other - and had to settle for a 1-under 69. That gave the Swede a four-shot lead over Dustin Johnson going into the final day of the US PGA Tour season.

This is far from over - not only the Tour Championship, but the FedEx Cup.

Stenson appeared to have both wrapped up when he got up-and-down from a bunker on the par-5 ninth for a tap-in birdie to reach 14 under, nine shots clear of Johnson. Everything changed as it began to rain.

Stenson pulled his approach into a corporate hospitality area to the left of the 10th green. He hooked a tee shot on the 14th that ran across a cart path and under a bush, and he had to make a 12-foot putt for bogey. He made bogey from the bunker on the 16th. What really stung was a three-putt bogey on the par-3 18th.

"I think I'll choose to look at it from the bright side, even though the weather is not that bright at the moment," Stenson said after setting down a rain-soaked umbrella. "Started the day with a four-shot lead and I still got it. So that's all that matters really."

Stenson was at 11-under 199, and only Johnson (7-under 203) and Steve Stricker (5-under 205) were within six shots of him.

Johnson made two late birdies and two solid pars, getting up-and-down after a close call with the water on the 17th, and then making a 30-foot par save on the last hole for a 67 that put him in the last group and gave him a chance to see who he was chasing.

Johnson was the last man into the 30-man field at East Lake, and he left Chicago on Monday not sure whether he would get in. Now he at least has a shot to start and end the season with a victory.

"If I keep driving it straight, then I'm going to give him a run tomorrow."

Stenson is still in great shape to go home with a lot of money - $10 million for winning the FedEx Cup, $1.44 million for winning the Tour Championship. Even if he were to finish third, he still would be in good shape to win the FedEx Cup.

Tiger Woods, the No. 1 seed, didn't make a birdie until he chipped in on the 14th hole. He rallied for a 69, the first time he has broken par all week. Woods was at 3-over 213, 14 shots behind in a tie for 26th.

Stenson felt bad for Adam Scott, whom he led by four shots at the start of the day.

Scott felt so miserable overnight and early Saturday that he had IV fluids administered at East Lake and only showed up on the range about 25 minutes before his tee times. He was sick and it showed with a 40 on the front nine. Scott wound up with a 74 to fall nine shots behind, and was thankful to doctors for getting him ready to play.

"Pretty disappointed, because I felt like I could have made a run today," Scott said. "When you're body is feeling so lethargic and heavy, the club feels like it weighs 60 pounds. And it was just hard work to get anything moving."

That might have ended his bid for tour player of the year. A win would have given the Masters champion three wins (including a major) and the FedEx Cup, which might have been enough to trump Woods and his five wins (no majors).

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