He missed. And then he missed the next from 4 feet for birdie and ended his day with 10 straight pars. Woods had to settle for a 66, and by the time everyone else came through the 17th hole, he slipped back to a tie for sixth, four shots out of the lead.
That's the same position he was in going into the final round of the British Open at Carnoustie, where he led briefly before fading. Now he gets another shot, and it most likely will take another round like Saturday.
"Not just myself, but everyone's going to have to shoot low rounds," Woods said. "It's soft, it's gettable, and you can't just go out there and make a bunch of pars."
Koepka was at 12-under 198 and will play in the final group of a major for the first time this morning. He won in the penultimate group at the US Open each of the past two years.
He already burnished his reputation two months ago by winning a US Open on two different courses. He has only one other PGA Tour victory, one in Europe and two in Japan. But put him against the strongest fields and biggest events, and he's a world-beater.
This test figures to be different. Bellerive is so soft that a charge can come from anywhere.
"I've watched Tiger win 14 of these things hanging around a lot of the time," Scott said. "He ran away with a few, for sure, but he hung around for a lot. And I would love to hang around [today]. And that might mean shooting 5 under again but I would love to be in the mix coming down the stretch and have the chance to hole some putts to win."
Ten players were within four shots of the lead, which includes defending champion Justin Thomas (68), Jason Day (67) and Stewart Cink, the 2009 British Open champion who played with Woods and matched his 66.
"It's an intense environment out there. It's fun," Cink said. "Hearing the crowd, and Tiger's performing great, it was like turning back the clock."
As easy as it looks at times, Bellerive can still bite at any moment.
No one paid more dearly than Woodland. Three shots behind at the turn, he and Kevin Kisner were in a front bunker. Woodland went over the green on to a slope at the back of another bunker, and his next shot went through the green back into the first bunker. Woodland's ball was in his footprints. He wound up with triple bogey and scrambled to get back in the mix.
"Really confident going into [today] with the way I fought the last eight holes," he said.
Koepka almost headed down that direction. He had to make an 8-foot par save on the 13th. He couldn't save par with a 100-foot bunker shot on the 14th after a poor drive, and his tee shot on the 15th settled behind a tree, forcing him to take relief with a penalty shot. He got up-and-down to escape with bogey. And as Woods was moving into position for a potential eagle, Koepka made a 10-foot par save on the 16th.
"To avoid making three bogeys in a row was very big," he said.
Woods and Fowler were among those just happy to get off the course. They had to finish their second rounds on Saturday morning because of rain that deluged Bellerive late Friday afternoon. Woods played 29 holes, while Fowler played 26.
No one caught Woodland, meaning his 36-hole score of 130 stood as the PGA Championship record. The cut was another record, coming at even-par 140 and knocking out the likes of Phil Mickelson. That means Mickelson will fail to automatically qualify for the Ryder Cup team for the first time since his first full season on the PGA Tour in 1993.
- AP