DOHA, Jan 25, 2013 (AFP) - Looking for his first victory on the European Tour since turning pro in 2008, the 25-year-old stroked a fluent 64 to carry a three-shot advantage over the trio of compatriot Simon Khan, Swede Alexander and New Zealander Michael Campbell into Saturday's final round.
In near-perfect conditions, Wood, best known for his challenges at the 2008 and 2009 British Open, shot past the front nine in 31, consolidating his position with an eight foot eagle on the 548-yard tenth.
The six foot five inch player then suffered a hiccup on the 12th, which he bogeyed, before picking up two more shots for a three-round aggregate of 13 under-par 201.
Wood could hardly conceal his joy. "I'm very excited. I wouldn't say it was one of my best rounds, but I played very solidly and was giving myself loads of chances," he said
"Going out today I thought as long as I kept myself in the mix going into tomorrow, then I was going to be really looking forward to it. Leading gives me a bit of a cushion."
"Obviously it's going to be hard. It's hard to win any tournament on The European Tour, so it's going to be difficult."
Wood shot into the limelight at the 2008 British Open when he finished fifth as an amateur. A year later he came agonisingly close to claiming the Claret Jug, but a bogey on the last hole saw him miss the play-off between Tom Watson and Stewart Cink by one stroke.
Khan also put himself in the mix with a bogey-free 64 after finding himself in the 31st place at the halfway stage.
The 2010 BMW PGA Championship winner at Wentworth actually held a two-shot lead by the time he was on the 13th hole but a string of five pars later coupled with Wood's charge saw end the day in joint third place.
"It's been a tough couple years since winning Wentworth, so it's amazing," said Khan, who has had just one top-ten finish since then.
"The feelings start coming back pretty quickly in this game, which is good. Hopefully I can carry it on tomorrow.
"It was really good fun on the front nine, and I had a good up and down out of the waste area on three, which is a real tough one. I managed to par that and that really kept me going.
"I'm pleased with the back nine. I played quite nicely - left a couple of putts short but haven't been up there for a while, so hopefully I can do that a little bit better tomorrow."
Sergio Garcia, who was part of a four-way tie with German Martin Kaymer, Australian Marcus Fraser and Portugal's Ricardo Santos, could only manage a 70 on Friday thanks to bogeys on the 15th and 18th.
His aggregate of 11-under par 205 sees him in joint third place with South African Brenden Grace who stroked a 67.
Australian Fraser saw three bogeys ruin his round as he finished on 71 for an aggregate of 206.
Santos, who had led after the first day, suffered a spectacular meltdown in the third round to blow his chances of winning for the second time on the European Tour.
The 2012 Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year had four bogeys and two double bogeys as he finished the day on 76 which gave him an aggregate of 211, 10 shots off the pace.
Leading third round scores at the 2.5 million dollar Qatar Masters at Doha Golf Club on Friday:
201 - Chris Wood (ENG) 67-70-64
204 - Simon Khan (ENG) 67-73-64, Alexander Noren (SWE) 71-67-66, Michael Campbell (NZL) 68-68-68
205 - Brenden Grace (RSA) 70-68-67, Sergio Garcia (ESP) 69-66-70
206 - Jbe Kruger (RSA) 70-68-68, Thorbjorn Olesen (DEN) 68-68-70, George Coetzee (RSA) 69-67-70, Marcus Fraser (AUS) 68-67-71
207 - Steve Webster (ENG) 69-71-67, Anthony Wall (ENG) 66-71-70, Gary Lockerbie (ENG) 67-69-71, Martin Kaymer (GER) 68-67-72
208 - Jason Dufner (USA) 71-70-67, Victor Dubuisson (FRA) 68-72-68, Miko Ilonen (FIN) 71-69-68, Loius Oosthuizen (RSA) 71-69-68, Henrik Stenson (SWE) 70-69-69, Lorenzo Gagli (ITA) 68-71-69, Andreas Harto (DEN) 68-69-71, Garth Mulroy (RSA) 69-68-71
209 - Richard Green (AUS) 68-73-68, Peter Hanson (SWE) 68-73-68, Brett Rumford (AUS) 67-73-68, Raphael Jacquelin (FRA) 73-67-69, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (ESP) 69-70-70, Thongchai Jaidee (THA) 70-69-70, Anders Hansen (DEN) 68-71-70, Felipe Aguilar (CHI) 69-67-73