GULLANE, Scotland — Funny thing, Adam Scott likes this spot even better.
A year ago, Scott took a four-shot lead to the final round of the British Open, only to throw away the claret jug with four straight bogeys at the end. It was a crushing loss, one that earned the Aussie a place among the greatest choke jobs in major championship history.
Well, the sting was softened greatly in April when Scott finally won his first major title with a nerve-racking playoff win over Angel Cabrera, removing any doubts about whether he could deal with the pressure of a high-stakes game.
And, now, Scott goes to the final round at Muirfield as the chaser rather than the chasee.
Scott shot a 1-under 70 on Saturday, quietly keeping himself in contention for his second major title, quietly giving himself a chance to finally get his name on one of golf's most venerable awards — just one line lower than he knows it should've been.
"It's a good feeling to sit here in this position. Absolutely," Scott said. "It's completely different. I go out there tomorrow not carrying the weight of the lead or not having won a major. It's a different feeling. Hopefully I can play enough quality shots to give myself chances to be in the hunt at the end."
On a crusty course that is playing extremely tough despite the un-Scottish-like weather — three straight days of warm, sunny conditions, with a forecast for more of the same Sunday — Scott has yet to shoot in the 60s.
But he's played as solidly as anyone, avoiding the sort of major mistakes that can ruin the entire tournament on one hole.