Gangjee leads Kensville Challenge after Rd 3
Gangjee leads Kensville Challenge after Rd 3
Gangjee's one-over 73 brought him down from overnight 7-under to 6-under 210 for 54 holes.

Ahmedabad: Rahil Gangjee went through a gamut of emotions with a bogey and double bogey and two birdies in the last four holes, but in the end came out with a one-shot lead at the end of the third round of the Gujarat Kensville Challenge 2012.

His one-over 73 on a very tough scoring day brought him down from overnight seven-under to six-under 210 for 54 holes.

However, Shiv Kapur, who held a share of the lead with Gangjee, dropped down dramatically with a 78 and is now one-under for three rounds to be tied 11th.

The next best Indian was Ashok Kumar (75, 70, 74) at three-over and in tied 27th with Peter Uihlein of the US.

American Dodge Kemmer (70) and German Max Keiffer (70) shared the second spot at five-under 211, while English duo Philip Archer (68) and Luke Goddard (70), Swede Jens Dantorp (74) and Dane Andreas Harto were all tied for fourth at four-under 212.

Archer moved from overnight 20th to fourth and put himself in the fray.

On a tough scoring day, when the wind and hard greens took a toll, there were just four cards under 70, two 68s and two 69s by Andreas Harto and Callum Macaulay.

Overnight co-leader Shiv Kapur had a nightmarish round that just wouldn't go away right till the last, where he had a double bogey. He had a round of six-over 78 that saw him plummet to tied 11th at one-under after being seven-under at the start.

The 33-year-old, Gangjee, who has one win on Asian Tour, dating back to his Rookie year in 2004, has not won since. But he has held lead either all alone or a share of it, once each on the European Tour (Avantha Masters 2010) and the Nationwide (Albertsons Boise 2011).

"I know what it is like to go in the lead on the last day. I have also learnt from it. Sure there will be some nervousness," said Gangjee.

Kapur managed to hold par for the first seven holes before double bogeying the eighth and he partially recovered with a birdie on ninth and that meant Gangjee was in sole lead.

On the back nine, Gangjee stayed steady with pars from 10th to 14th, while Kapur struggled with the wind and hard greens and his hitting too let him down somewhat. Kapur bogeyed 11th, 13th and 14th which escalated his downward slide.

On the 15th Gangjee moved to eight-under with a 12-foot birdie, but he gave away that shot on 16th and then a double bogey on 17th.

Meanwhile Kapur added to his woes on the par-4 18th, where he was just off the green. He left his chip short, then hit his first putt five feet past the hole and failed to hole it and ended with a double bogey for a 78.

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