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Harrington is in a tie for 24th in Bermuda. PA

Harrington tied for 24th as he heads into final round at Bermuda

Ireland’s Seamus Power shot a three under round today to move up to 36th at the PGA tour event.

PADRAIG HARRINGTON SHOT an even par round to remain at four under for the tournament in Bermuda.

After his impressive show on Thursday, when he scrambled well to shoot four under for his opening round, Harrington has had to be content with a less flashy show on the two days since. He is tied for 24th, dropping 12 places from his second round position.

Fellow Irishman, Seamus Power, had a good round – shooting 68 to move up 22 places to 36th. He posted five birdies in total but a bogey on the last blotted his copybook.

Elsewhere, Doc Redman found the wind far more manageable, and he took advantage with a 4-under 67 for a one-shot lead going into the final round of the Bermuda Championship.

The wind came out of the opposite direction as the previous day and it wasn’t quite as strong. It showed in the scores and in the number of opportunities for players who never won or have gone without winning in years.

Redman was at 10-under 203, one shot ahead of Ryan Armour (70), Wyndham Clark (70) and Kramer Hickok (69), who took three putts from a tough spot on the fringe on the 18th at Port Royal.

Another shot behind were Matt Jones (66), Brian Gay (67) and Ollie Schniederjans (69). Jones was bogey-free in the third round, which to him was as impressive as any of his five birdies.

Redman, the 2017 U.S. Amateur champion, is among 10 players separated by four shots who have never won on the PGA TOUR. A victory tomorrow comes with an invitation to the Masters next April.

“I feel like with the wind switching, it was a little easier,” Redman said. “And it was still really windy. But yesterday was incredible. We couldn’t have been far away from stopping play yesterday. That made it a little easier. And the greens roll great, so if you have looks at it you can make birdies.”

Redman still was mindful of the wind, particularly on the par-5 17th when he made decisions to play short off the tee because of the strong left-to-right wind off the Atlantic Ocean and potential problems it could have created.

The wind also made it tough on Armour, the 44-year-old from Ohio who picked the wrong day to not be swinging his best. What saved him was a short game that enabled him to break par for the third straight day and to stay very much in the mix to win on Sunday.

“I’m going to have to go figure out what was going on,” Armour said. “Toward the end there, I started hitting the center of the face a little more. As you know, when the winds are this high, you’ve got to hit in the center or else it’s going to get blown all over.”

He took a little off a pitching wedge for a beautiful third shot just below the pin for birdie on the par-5 17th, and he narrowly missed a 15-footer on the 18th that would have given him a share of the lead.

Jones is used to windy conditions from his roots in Australia, and he handled it well. He will be going for his first PGA TOUR victory since the 2014 Houston Open, although Jones won the Australian Open at the end of last year.

Gay, 48, whose putting stroke atones for his lack of power, has not won since 2013. He was long enough on the 507-yard 17th to make eagle to cap off his 67 and put him in prime position.

The oldest player in the field, 64-year-old Fred Funk, didn’t fare so well. He shot 75 and was 13 shots behind.

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