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Rose takes charge
Tampa Golf Heal
Justin Rose tees off on the 18th hole during the third round of the Transitions Championship golf tournament Saturday in Palm Harbor, Fla. - photo by Associated Press

    PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Justin Rose is coming off a year in which he won two PGA Tour events on strong golf courses. He knows what to expect from his emotions in the final round and how to stay patient amid a crowded leaderboard.
    The four guys behind him have never won.
    And that made Rose's one-shot lead Saturday in the Transitions Championship seem a little larger.
    "It doesn't mean it's all going to go smoothly tomorrow," Rose said. "You have to be ready for whatever happens. But at least I kind of am aware of the ups and downs, and the things I'm going to face. And I think that maybe it's a lot easier to deal with."
    Rose was patient for long enough for the birdies to fall, and he shot a second straight round of 6-under 65 in more perfect conditions at Innisbrook to build a lead over Brendon de Jonge and Webb Simpson.
    A 6-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole put Rose at 13-under 200, one shot off the 54-hole tournament record.
    De Jonge and Simpson have never won on the PGA Tour. Neither have the two guys another shot behind — rookie Scott Stalling, who only made his first cut in the big leagues last week in Puerto Rico; and Gary Woodland, who lost in a playoff at the Bob Hope Classic this year.

"You want to give yourself a chance to win, and I have that opportunity now," de Jonge said.

Simpson, whose wife recently gave birth to their first child, kept pace with Rose for much of the day until dropping shots on two of the tough par 3s on the back nine. He still had a third straight 67 and was trying not to think ahead to Sunday.

"This course is tough enough to where you've got to think about the hole you're on," Simpson said. "That is what we dream about, and this is what we practice for, to have a chance on Sunday. So I'm looking forward to the challenge."

De Jonge earned a spot in the final group with a steady round of 66.

Nine players were separated by only three shots going into the final round, and while most of them don't have Rose's winning experience, there is a name that is hard to ignore. Nick Watney, coming off a World Golf Championship title last week at Doral, had seven birdies in his round of 65 and was in the group at 10-under 203 with Brandt Snedeker, who shot a 67.

Garrett Willis and Chris Couch, the co-leaders after the second round, each shot 70 to fall back, although they were still in the mix.

Sergio Garcia finally made a bogey in America this year — it's his first PGA Tour event since last August — and then made four more in a round of 72 that most likely left him too far behind. He was six shots back.

PGA champion Martin Kaymer, the No. 1 player in the world, had a 71 and was nine shots behind.

Rose was closer to the cut line than the top of the leaderboard halfway through his second round until he ran off five birdies on the back nine of Innisbrook and wound up with a 65. He had five birdies on his next nine — the front nine Saturday — to take the lead.

"First 27 holes of the tournament, I had to be really patient," he said. "I knew I was playing well and wasn't getting much out of it. Obviously, the next combined 18 went really hot. But this is a golf course that it's easy to be patient on, really, in terms of you hit in the middle of the green, you two-putt for par, you know you're not being lapped by the rest of the field.

"It's not Disney from that type of scoring perspective."

Watney went from feeling flat on Friday to feeling fresh in the third round, and it showed. He revved up the gallery behind the 17th green with a 10-foot birdie, and made a long two-putt across the 18th for his 65.

"I've done all I can do. I'm really excited for tomorrow," Watney said. "I'm just going to take a lot from last week. I'm definitely riding some momentum. I just feel good with my game and I'm feeling more and more comfortable."

Woodland is an intriguing contender.

He is the latest pure athlete to join the PGA Tour, cut along the lines of Dustin Johnson, only less polished. He spent his freshman year playing basketball, saw a greater future in golf and transferred to Kansas. That's when he started facing his first real competition, but after shoulder surgery last year, Woodland is starting to progress quickly.

He lost in the three-man playoff at the Hope, and has been steady on a Copperhead course he has never seen. Woodland, one of the biggest hitters on tour, decided to go conservative and hit mostly 2-iron off the tee. It's working out for him.

The surprise is Stallings.

He missed every cut on the West Coast Swing and finally earned a paycheck last week — just over $11,000 — when he tied for 42nd in the Puerto Rico Open. His round featured a hole-in-one on No. 8, the third-toughest hole at Innisbrook, and he followed that with five birdies on the back nine.

Stallings received a sponsor's exemption, mainly because he and Kenny Perry have the same agent, and Perry has an endorsement relationship with the title sponsor. It was a great break for a guy who has low status in his rookie year, and he's running with it.

"I was surprisingly relaxed," Stallings said. "I knew that I had nothing to lose. It was basically play well this week, and take advantage of the opportunity or if I didn't play well, I was going to sit back and wait until I got in toward after the U.S. Open, because that's when the tournaments would start opening up and the fields would get a little bigger."