Porter still the player to beat at the Vic Open

Cassie Porter will go head to head with former world No.1 Jiyai Shin in the final round of the women's Vic Open.

JIYAI SHIN.
JIYAI SHIN. Picture: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

Rising star Cassie Porter started shakily but finished her third round in superb style, ensuring she remains atop the leaderboard with one day to play in the women's Vic Open at 13th Beach.

Porter teed off on Saturday with a five-shot lead, only for most of that to disappear within the space of an hour as she bogeyed three of the first four holes.

The Queenslander steadied the ship for a while with birdies at the 5th and 7th.

But by the time she got to the 18th tee, Porter was two over for the day and had slipped back into a tie for the lead with former world No.1 Jiyai Shin.

But rather than wilting, Porter rose to the occasion with aplomb.

The 20-year-old flushed a 4-iron to six feet on the par-5 18th and coolly drained the eagle putt to move back into outright first at 15-under 202.

For the third time in four days, she will play alongside Shin on Sunday after the Korean carded the best round of the day, a 6-under 66, to improve into a tie for second with Thailand's Pavarisa Yoktuan at 13 under.

"It was quite a finish," said Porter, whose level-par round of 72 included the eagle on the 18th, three birdies and five bogeys.

"I needed to pull something out of the bag today.

"It was a bit of a fight out there on the course, super windy.

"The wind was swirling all day so I'm definitely happy to come out with even par.

"I hit the 4-iron (on the 18th).

"We were kind of thinking it would be a little bit short but with the adrenalin on the last hole it got there and it was nice to hole the putt to finish."

Just as important for Porter was her ability to stay calm after the tough start to her round.

"It was a matter of sticking to my processes and coming back to what I can do in the moment and my feels for the week," she said.

"It came together and it was nice to fight back."

The next best-placed Australian was another young gun, Grace Kim, who shot 69 to move into a tie for fifth at eight under.

Seven-time major winner Karrie Webb had a quadruple-bogey eight at the par-4 13th hole, but still remained on course for a top-10 finish.

She signed for a 1-over 73 on Saturday to be in a tie for 14th at three under.