Golf

Canada's Corey Conners advances to semis at World Golf Championships

Canada's Corey Conners punched his ticket to the semifinals with a two-up win over Abraham Ancer in the quarter-finals of the Dell Technologies Match Play on Saturday in Austin, Texas. The Listowel, Ont., native, who is the first Canadian to reach the semifinals at Match Play, will take on Kevin Kisner next.

Listowel, Ont., native edges Abraham Ancer of Mexico in quarters; plays Kisner next

Canada's Corey Conners plays a shot on the eighth hole of his quarter-final win over Abraham Ancer of Mexico on the fourth day of the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club on Saturday in Austin, Texas. (Chuck Burton/Getty Images)

Canada's Corey Conners punched his ticket to the semifinals with a two-up win over Abraham Ancer in the quarter-finals of the Dell Technologies Match Play on Saturday in Austin, Texas.

The Listowel, Ont., native, who is the first Canadian to reach the semifinals at Match Play, will take on Kevin Kisner next.

Conners had an easy time with Takumi Kanaya in the morning (5 and 3), and then played the 18th hole in competition for the first time all week in his win over Ancer.

One match required a comeback the likes off which Austin Country Club has never seen. The other was easy enough to feel like a warm walk along Lake Austin. Either way, Kisner just seems to win in the Dell Technologies Match Play.

WATCH | Conners moves on to golf worlds semis:

Corey Conners punches ticket to semis at World Golf Championships

3 years ago
Duration 0:46
The Listowel, Ont. native won 2-up over Abraham Ancer and will face Kevin Kisner in the next round.

Three down on the 15th tee, Kisner won the next four holes to beat Adam Scott in the fourth round Saturday morning. In the quarter-finals, he was 3 up on Will Zalatoris after four holes and never trailed in a 4-and 3 victory.

Kisner reached the final day of this fickle tournament for the third time, the most of anyone since it changed from single-elimination to group play in 2015. He lost in the championship match in 2018 and won the next year.

But he has plenty of company among the semifinalists.

Scottie Scheffler got a tiny measure of revenge when he went 18 holes to outlast Billy Horschel, who beat him a year ago in the final match. Scheffler advanced in the afternoon by beating Seamus Power of Ireland, 3 and 2.

WATCH l Corey Conners advances to quarters at world golf championships:

Corey Conners advances to quarters at World Golf Championships

3 years ago
Duration 2:02
The Canadian defeated Takumi Kanaya 5 & 3 in the Round of 16 and moves on to face Abraham Ancer.

Also in the semifinals is Dustin Johnson, who each day seems to be getting closer to the form that made him No. 1 in the world longer than any other player since Tiger Woods. Johnson eliminated 49-year-old Richard Bland in a scrappy fourth-round match, then went the distance with Brooks Koepka in the quarter-finals.

Johnson had to rally from 2 down against Koepka in a fascinating duel between former world No. 1 players and multiple major champions. They were all square when Johnson halved the 12th hole with a 15-foot birdie, took the lead with a 25-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole and saved another tough par on the 16th.

Johnson closed him out by driving the 18th green, forcing Koepka to aggressively try to hole a chip from left of the green that went off the putting surface into a drainage ditch.

Johnson, who won the Match Play in 2017, will face Scheffler in the semifinals Sunday morning.

For Scheffler, more is at stake than his third PGA Tour win in his last five starts. Rahm, the world's No. 1 player, lost to Koepka in 19 holes in the morning. That means Scheffler can go to the top of the world ranking if he were to win the Match Play.

That's a little too far ahead for a guy who rarely thinks about anything than his next shot, especially facing Johnson on Sunday morning before a partisan Texas Longhorns crowd.

Kisner will try to become only the third player to reach the championship match at least three times since this World Golf Championship began in 1999, joining Tiger Woods and Geoff Ogilvy.

Scott went 3 up with a birdie on the 14th hole, and Kisner had no room for error. He stuffed a wedge to 5 feet for birdie to win the 15th. He holed a bunker shot for eagle that had to clear another bunker and a ridge protecting the pin in the back right corner of the par-5 16th.

Scott helped by missing a 10-foot par putt on the par-3 17th, and then Kisner went ahead for the first time all match by making a 7-foot birdie putt at the end.

"I don't ever give up," Kisner said. "I knew I needed to make some birdies. I knew I needed him to start thinking about it. That's what I'm always trying to do is get the opponent to think about what I'm doing instead of what they're doing, and I was able to do that when I holed that bunker shot on 16."

Zalatoris lost a big lead to Kevin Na in the fourth round before making a birdie on the 18th hole to force overtime, and he outlasted him on the fourth extra hole. And then he had to go back out and face Kisner, who now has a 21-6-1 record at Austin Country Club.

Johnson ended the hopes of the sentimental favorite, Bland, the oldest man in the field who needed to win one more match to assure moving into the top 50 for a spot in the Masters. Bland went 2 up quickly, missed a 10-foot birdie putt on the seventh hole and then Johnson won the next three to take control.

With files from CBC Sports

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