Jon Rahm kept mistakes off his card Saturday at Riviera, the difference in allowing him to post a 6-under 65 and start to pull away from the field at the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles.

Tiger Woods lost ground, too, even if he looked good doing it. Woods had a tap-in eagle on his way to a 67, his lowest Saturday round in an official event since he won the Zozo Championship in Japan in 2019. Even so, he was 12 shots back.

Rahm capped off his bogey-free day with a 25-foot birdie putt that gave him a three-shot lead over Max Homa, who had a share of the lead until consecutive bogeys from the bunker along the back nine. He had a 69.

Keith Mitchell made his only bogey on the final hole and had a 69 to fall four behind. The only other player within five shots was Patrick Cantlay (68).

Rahm has been the best player in golf over the last six months. Dating to the BMW PGA Championship on the European tour, he has finished among the top 10 in nine consecutive tournaments, winning four of them.

All that’s left is a return to No. 1 in the world, and he can do that with a victory Sunday.

For Woods, it felt like a win just being back on the PGA Tour for four straight rounds, something he hasn’t done since the Masters. Then again, he only played three times last year because of his right leg that was severely damaged in a February 2021 car crash.

He made the cut on the number when the second round was completed Saturday morning, 11 shots off the lead and starting on the back nine in one of the last few groups. That didn’t keep thousands of fans lining the fairway.

“Today was better,” Woods said. “I felt like I made some nice adjustments with my putting and that was the thing that held make back (Friday).”

Woods made a few birdies on the back nine, and then hit 5-iron onto the front of the green at the par-5 first hole, the ball rolling across the firm turf and a few inches next to the cup before settling 3 feet away for an eagle.

His only bogey came at the seventh. It was encouraging nonetheless because Woods says he’s still sore walking after his rounds. He only made it to the weekend twice in the three tournaments he played last year, posting rounds of 78 at Augusta National and 79 in the PGA Championship at Southern Hills.

“I wanted to get in touch with the leaders today, I was hoping to shoot something a little bit lower than I did just so I could reach out to them hopefully with a low round tomorrow,” Woods said. “I might be a little far away.”

That leader is Rahm, and it’s daunting regardless of the margin.

Rahm was in a terrific battle with Homa, the Southern California native and Cal alum who won at Riviera two years ago. Rahm took the lead by finishing the front nine with consecutive bogeys, only for Homa to catch with a pitch to tap-in range on the 10th and catch him again with a bold play left of the left pin on the 13th.

But it was Homa who blinked first.

He found the fairway bunker on the 15th, the toughest hole at Riviera, came up short of the green and missed a tough 10-footer for par. He pulled his tee shot on the par-3 16th into a bunker and again missed a 10-foot putt for par.

Rahm motored along, making a 12-foot par putt on the 13th and chipping nicely when he did miss the greens to eliminate the stress. He ended with a birdie to reach 15-under 198, one extra shot to work with on Sunday.

Also in range is the oldest 72-hole scoring record on the PGA Tour — 20-under 264 by Lanny Wadkins in 1985. All that matters to Rahm is another victory that would give him the ranking that his game embodies now.

LANGER NEARS RECORD >> Bernhard Langer remained in position to tie Hale Irwin’s PGA Tour Champions victory record of 45, shooting a 2-under 70 on Saturday to take a one-stroke lead into the final round of the Chubb Classic in Naples, Florida. The 65-year-old Langer had a 10-under 134 total on Tiburon Golf Club’s Black Course after bettering his age Friday with a 64. Charles Schwab Cup winner Steven Alker (65) was a stroke back with Jerry Kelly (66), Dicky Pride (70) and Paul Goydos (71).

Motorsports

Several drivers skip practice >> Three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin and his six fellow Toyota drivers on Saturday skipped the final practice for “The Great American Race.”

Even action sports star Travis Pastrana, who has little experience at Daytona International Speedway, sat out the 50-minute session Saturday. He is driving a third car for 23XI Racing, the team co-owned by Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan.

“I feel like I have the best Toyota here,” Pastrana said. “I’m just so so proud, stoked, for this team and for them giving me this amazing hot rod.”

Sixteen of 40 cars did get in a final practice, but not pole-sitter Alex Bowman or his fellow Hendrick Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott and William Byron. Brad Keselowski topped the speed chart in his No. 6 Ford, reaching 191.201 mph during his 14-lap stint. Joey Logano was second, followed by Ryan Blaney, Ryan Preece and Harrison Burton.

Hill wins Xfinity Opener >> Austin Hill on Saturday won the Xfinity Series season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway for the second consecutive year, diminishing some of the sting he felt two days earlier when he failed to qualify for the Daytona 500. Hill rebounded and drove from last to first and was declared the winner after a long NASCAR review of the finishing order.

NFL

BIENIEMY HIRED BY WASHINGTON >> Eric Bieniemy has agreed to be the Washington Commanders’ offensive coordinator and assistant head coach. Bieniemy, a two-time Super Bowl-winning assistant with Kansas City, emerged from a pool of more than a half-dozen candidates as Washington’s choice for the job following the Chiefs’ second championship in his five seasons as their offensive coordinator. The longtime NFL assistant has interviewed for numerous head coaching jobs.

WNBA

GRINER BACK WITH MERCURY >> Brittney Griner, who was a free agent, re-joined the Phoenix Mercury on a one-year contract, according to a person familiar with the deal. Griner, 32, had said she would return to Phoenix in a social media post in December, after she returned home from her 10-month ordeal in Russia that included jail time and ended with a dramatic prisoner swap.

The Mercury announced Saturday that Diana Taurasi had re-signed a multiyear contract with the team.

Soccer

QUAKES FALL TO RED BULLS >> In their final preseason game, the Earthquakes fell to the New York Red Bulls FC 2-0 on Saturday at the Empire Polo Club in Indio as part of the 2023 Coachella Valley Invitational. It marked the team’s final preseason match of 2023. Tom Barlow scored both goals for New York.

The Quakes’ regular-season opener is Feb. 25 in Atlanta.