| Appleby on his way to third straight Mercedes victory(AP)
 Updated: 2006-01-08 13:56
 
 Whether they change the greens or change the calendar, it doesn't seem to 
matter to Stuart Appleby. Whenever he gets to Kapalua for the Mercedes 
Championships, he looks unstoppable.  
 
 
 On another blustery day that 
severely tested the 28-man field of last year's PGA Tour winners, Appleby was 
steady as ever Saturday and birdied three of his last six holes for a 3-under 70 
and a two-shot lead over U.S. Open champion Michael Campbell.
 | 
 Appleby of Australia gestures to the crowd on the 
 18th green after finishing the third round of the Mercedes 
 Championships in 
 Maui.[Reuters] |  Appleby was an inch from the green on the 663-yard closing hole, gently 
rolled a putt to tap-in range for birdie and walked off the Plantation Course at 
6-under 213, in prime position to become the first player in nearly 50 years to 
win the winners-only event three straight times.  Campbell overcame a sluggish start by playing bogey-free over the final 12 
holes and shot 71, putting him in the final group with Appleby for the second 
straight day. Jim Furyk, a past winner at Kapalua, birdied on the two par 5s 
coming in for a 72 and was at 3-under 216.
 Only a half-dozen players were under par, and only one Kapalua rookie was in 
that mix. Lucas Glover needed some magic getting there, with a hole-in-one on 
the 203-yard eighth hole _ for a 70 to finish at 217.  Vijay Singh (74) and Sergio Garcia (73) each birdied the last hole to get to 
218. "If you just miss it, you're going to hit it way worse than you think," 
Singh said. "It was a grind. Putts like 3 or 4 feet it's like, 'Please, hit a 
good, solid stroke."'
 Scoring has always been low at Kapalua since the tournament moved here in 
1999, with the highest winning score coming in 2000 when Tiger Woods beat Ernie 
Els in a playoff after they finished at 16 under.  This looks more like a U.S. Open _ on the scoreboard and inside the ropes. 
 
 
 
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