It’s a Ryder redux in Atlanta


Sergio Garcia and Anthony Kim are in the final pairing at the Tour Championship.

ATLANTA (AP) — Thanks to the cup, the Tour Championship finally might be worth watching.

No, not the FedEx Cup.

Six days after Anthony Kim routed Sergio Garcia in the opening singles match at the Ryder Cup, two of golf’s most dynamic young players square off again in the third round at East Lake.

Kim had to settle for a 1-under 69 Friday after making bogey from the bunker, giving him a two-shot lead over Garcia and putting them in the final pairing today at the Tour Championship.

This is not match play. There are 36 holes remaining. At stake is $1.26 million, not a 17-inch gold trophy to share. Besides, it was only a month ago that they played together the first two rounds of the PGA Championship.

Even so, the fact they are playing together so close to the Ryder Cup figures to bring the Tour Championship to life.

“We had one day of golf — really, 14 holes of golf,” Kim said, trying to downplay the pairing and instead drawing laughter for his veiled reference of a 5-and-4 victory at Valhalla.

Kim was at 7-under 133, and while he will have a 2-up lead of sorts today at East Lake, the momentum might lie with Garcia. He was 4 over through his first six holes of the tournament, rallied for a 70, then followed that with nearly flawless play for a 65.

Not to be forgotten was Kim’s tag-team partner from the Ryder Cup — Phil Mickelson, who ran off five birdies over the last seven holes for a 68 that put him three shots behind.

And there’s more at stake than just a big check and an elite title for the winner. Mickelson, Garcia and Kim are the top contenders to win the Vardon Trophy for the lowest adjusted scoring average on the PGA Tour.

“We still have a lot of golf left this weekend that will probably decide it,” Mickelson said.

They were among six players in the 30-man field who managed to break par over two days, joined by Camilo Villegas (66) at 2-under 138, and K.J. Choi (70) and Mike Weir (69) at 139.

Kim, whose opening 64 was eight shots better than the field average, looked as though he might go even lower when he stuffed his approach inside 3 feet on the first hole and hit two more approaches inside 6 feet through five holes.

But he made enough mistakes — a pair of three-putt bogeys on the front nine — to keep enough players in range.

“I feel pretty positive about shooting under par on this golf course and not feeling like I got a lot out of my game,” he said.