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Northern Trust Open notes: A somber, successful homecoming week for Kevin Chappell

Kevin Chappell tees off at No. 2 during the third round of the Northern Trust Open on Saturday.

Kevin Chappell tees off at No. 2 during the third round of the Northern Trust Open on Saturday.

(Robert Laberge / Getty Images)
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Kevin Chappell was deep into his third round at Pebble Beach last Saturday, heading for a missed cut, when he turned on his phone to check for flights out and got awful news in a text.

Chris Roth, the caddie for Chappell’s former UCLA teammate Patrick Cantlay, had been killed in a hit-and-run accident in Newport Beach early Saturday morning. Chappell and Roth had become friends over many a practice round.

“The golf world lost a good human,” Chappell said Saturday afternoon at Riviera Country Club. “Life always seems to bring perspective when I’m most caught up in my game.”

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Feeling “at peace” this week, Chappell has played remarkably well on his old college stamping grounds. In shooting a five-under-par 66 on Saturday — tying for the best score of the day — he is only two shots off Bubba Watson’s lead, in a five-way tie for fifth, heading into the final round of the Northern Trust Open.

Over his career at UCLA, where the Fresno native won the individual NCAA national championship in 2008, Chappell, 29, played dozens of rounds at Riviera, the Bruins’ team hustling to get around the course in front of the members in the early morning.

“Being back here always feels like home,” Chappell said. “Riviera is such a special place. Being able to play it as much as we did in college, you almost take it for granted.”

With one Web.com Tour victory on his resume, scored in 2010, Chappell is still seeking his first PGA Tour win. He came closest in the 2013 Memorial with a solo second.

If Chappell were to triumph, he’d be the second Bruin in four years to win here. John Merrick prevailed in 2013.

Van Aswegen’s ace

One of the best shots of the third round came from Tyrone Van Aswegen, a 34-year-old native of Johannesburg, South Africa, who used a nine-iron to hit a hole in one — his first on the PGA Tour — on the 166-yard 16th.

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“The pin was front left, and we couldn’t actually see the bottom of the hole, we could just see the flag,” Van Aswegen said. “It was just left of the flag, and I said, ‘Come down,’ because I hit it really sweet. The greens are real soft, and it pitched and spun back. I couldn’t see where it went, and the people behind the green went crazy.”

Van Aswegen, whose four-under 67 round moved him to six under and a tie for 19th, was a little bummed that he didn’t win a car. But he was pleased when told that, through a Quicken Loans sweepstakes, his ace won a year’s worth of mortgage payments for a fan in Wisconsin.

“Any time we can help someone pay off their bills, that’s great,” Van Aswegen said. “I’m real excited for whoever. Hopefully it was a really big house and a big payment.”

Notable

Tying Chappell for the day’s best score of 66 were Padraig Harrington, Justin Thomas and Harold Varner III. Harrington (six under overall) is tied for 19th, and Thomas and Varner are five under. … First-round leader Camilo Villegas opened Saturday by going eagle-birdie, but made only one birdie the rest of the day, shot 70 and was tied for 19th … The most difficult hole this week has been the 479-yard 12th, playing at .33 strokes over par. The par-five first is the easiest at .80 strokes under. …

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The course’s biggest conversation piece, the short par-four 10th, has been the fourth-easiest hole (.15 under). ... Sunday’s round will be the last played under the Northern Trust Open name of the last nine years. Hyundai takes over sponsorship next year, though a name for the event has not been announced.

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