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Masters notes: Rory McIlroy can’t make it happen in a 77

Rory McIlroy reacts to a missed birdie putt on the 17th green during the third round of the Masters.

Rory McIlroy reacts to a missed birdie putt on the 17th green during the third round of the Masters.

(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)
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Rory McIlroy wasn’t outwardly rooting for Jordan Spieth’s late troubles Saturday at the Masters. But neither was he mourning them.

After an awful day in which he shot five-over-par 77 in the premier last pairing with Spieth, McIlroy took solace in Spieth’s bogey-double-bogey finish that put the leader at three under, and left McIlroy five shots behind instead of eight or more.

“I would be feeling a lot worse about myself if I hadn’t just seen what Jordan did the last two holes,” McIlroy said. “I sort of take a bit of heart from that, that I’m still in this golf tournament.”

McIlroy didn’t make a birdie, and he looked out of the running for the tournament when he bogeyed the 10th and double-bogeyed the 11th. Spieth also double-bogeyed the latter hole, but the American star responded with three straight birdies.

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McIlroy, hoping to complete a career Grand Slam, never responded.

“I was just sort of trying to play upstream,” McIlroy said. “I was always trying to get something going, and I just couldn’t. I felt like I righted the ship the last seven holes; I made seven pars coming in and had a lot of chances, but I didn’t take any opportunities.”

Beware of Kaufman

With the sunny name and look of a kid about 16, Smylie Kaufman might hardly be considered threatening. But he seemingly has little to lose in his final-group pairing with Spieth on Sunday after his strong third-round 69.

“This golf course plays hard. I tend to play well on hard golf courses,” said Kaufman, 24, who is playing in his first Masters. “I’m driving the ball really well right now and I’m going to get on greens just as much as everybody else. I think I’ll have a pretty good opportunity to be in contention, which doesn’t surprise me.”

A former basketball player who led his high school team to an Alabama state title, the 6-foot-1 Kaufman is a PGA Tour rookie who won his first event in October in Las Vegas. He shot 61 in the final round to come from seven shots back.

Horschel’s horrible break

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Billy Horschel got about the worst wind break possible.

At the par-five 15th, Horschel hit his second shot onto the left portion of the green. His eagle putt just slipped by the cup and stopped about 10 feet past. Or at least long enough for Horschel to nearly reach his ball before a gust of wind started it rolling again toward the water. It caught speed on the slope and dropped in.

The misfortune meant a penalty stroke, and a good chance for birdie ended up being a bogey six. Horschel shot 73 to be in a tie for 16th at four over.

A high-strung player, Horschel was animated in talking to rules officials on the green — making the point they had pushed the dryness of the course to the limits.

“I knew that once the ball rolls, once it’s in play, you have to play it from where it finishes, and obviously I didn’t have my scuba gear to play it from the water,” Horschel said.

Day still has a chance

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If the world’s top player can fly under the radar, Jason Day has done it this week. Yet he’s still in a formidable position to take a run at winning his first Masters and second straight major.

As the Australian watched 58-year-old playing partner Bernhard Langer play an inspired round of 70, Day shot 71 to be tied for fifth at even par.

“If they start coming back, then that’s when you’ve got to go, ‘OK, I need to kind of show a little bit more patience.’ Even though I’m going to have scoring opportunities. I don’t want to make mistakes.”

Day’s highlight was the 70-foot birdie putt he made at the 14th hole. As it happened, Langer topped him by chipping in for birdie.

“It was pretty cool, because obviously he gave me knuckles on the way up,” Day said.

Notable

Bryson DeChambeau, the amateur who began the day four shots off the lead, shot 77, with double bogeys on the 15th and 18th holes. He fell to five over, eight behind Spieth. ... Two recent Masters champions have been unimpressive this week. World No. 4 Bubba Watson, who made the cut on the number, shot 76 in the third round and was at 10 over. Seventh-ranked Adam Scott scored 75 and was seven over.

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