Woods joint leader in Abu Dhabi golf

Tiger Woods shares the joint lead in the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship after Saturday’s third round, firing a 66 to stand at 11-under for the tournament.

That was level with England’s Robert Rock who also had a 66 and two shots clear of Irishman Rory McIlroy (68), Sweden’s Peter Hanson (65), Francesco Molinari of Italy (66) and Paul Lawrie of Scotland (64).

A further stroke back came South African pair George Coetzee (65) and James Kingston (67) alongside Jean-Baptiste Gonnet of France (69) and Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark (71).

Woods started the day in the $US2.7 million ($A2.55 million) European Tour event tied for fifth with McIlroy and seven others on five-under, two shy of leader Olesen.

Playing confident, controlled golf off the tee in what is his season-opener, the 36-year-old American completed a second bogey-free round in three days and added five birdies for his 67.

“There are a ton of guys with a chance to win,” Woods said.

“We have not separated ourselves from the field. I need to go out there and put together a solid round of golf.”

The lead changed several times on a day of perfect playing conditions which allowed for low-scoring on Abu Dhabi’s testing National Course.

Kingston, Gonnet, Hanson and Rock all took command at one stage or another before Woods edged ahead with his fifth birdie of the day at the 14th.

From there on in, he parred the next four holes and birdied the par-five last after reaching the green comfortably in two.

His six-under 66 was his best tournament score since he shot the same number in the second round of last year’s Masters.

It was while playing at Augusta National that Woods picked up the leg injury that sidelined him for most of the rest of the season.

His playing partner for the third straight day, McIlroy, stayed in touch with a 68 to settle in at two strokes off the lead, and he was pleased that he showed more consistency than on the two previous days.

Rock, ranked 117th in the world, birdied the last two holes to draw level with Woods and will play alongside him for the first time in Sunday’s finale, an experience he said he was looking forward to.

World No.2 Lee Westwood, shrugged off the effects of a jarred nerve in his neck to fire a 68 which left him at four-under-par, but fellow Englishman Luke Donald, the top-ranked player in the world, is out of contention.

He failed to get anything going and had to settle for a 73, which left him at level-par for the tournament.

The event is the fourth tournament in the 2012 Race to Dubai after three in South Africa and it opens a three-week long Desert swing in the Gulf which takes in Doha next week and the Dubai Desert Classic the week after.

It also is the season-opener for most of the big names in golf as they shake off the winter cobwebs and start preparations for the first major of the year, The Masters, which takes place at Augusta National in early April.

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