Luke Donald is looking for a repeat performance on Sunday after firing the low score of the third round at the British Masters supported by Sky Sports.
The Englishman hit six birdies in nine holes from the seventh on the Marquess' Course to register a 65 and catapult himself up the leaderboard to sit just three shots off the lead held by Matthew Fitzpatrick and Kiradech Aphibarnrat.
Donald's last European Tour win also came on home soil at the 2012 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth and the 2011 Race to Dubai winner believes a repeat of his third round performance could bring him victory at Woburn.
I've put myself in a great position, I'd love to go out there and shoot another round like this. I think that might be good enough - Luke Donald
"I would just love to win any tournament to be honest, but it would be a little bit more special coming here in the UK. It's been a little bit of a dry period for me. I haven't won for a couple years, but I would love dearly to get back into that winner's circle."
Donald's putting was his major strength on Saturday as he took just 27 strokes and the 37 year old is hoping for more of the same down the stretch.
"They're very good greens," he added. "You can see the ball holding the greens pretty well and they're very undulating so the lagging is very tough
"I've been extremely happy with my speed on the greens this week. I've really minimised three-putts when I've had the long opportunities. That's what you always want."
One man unhappy with his play on the greens was Shane Lowry who sat alongside Donald at nine under.
The Irishman had 33 putts in his third round but is still confident he can go out and win with a low score.
"I actually didn't have to work that hard, I played as good golf as I've ever played today, I just couldn't get the ball in hole," he said.
"I don't know how many putts I had but I had a lot and if I can hole a few putts tomorrow, you never know what can happen.
"I'm only three back and if I can shoot mid-60s tomorrow, I can win this tournament.
"I'm playing on confidence and I'm not going out there trying to do anything tomorrow, I'm just going out there with a gameplan and I'm trying to execute that."
Søren Kjeldsen is two shots better off than Donald and Lowry at 11 under but believes he has to take him game up another level to add a second 2015 title to his Dubai Duty Free Irish Open win.
The Dane has gone 65-68-69 so far this week and believes a low score is out there for the man who plays well enough.
"It's a quality golf course and therefore it's going to be a quality finish as well," he said.
"You can get gong here, it's still pretty soft so if you drive it well you can leave yourself a lot of chances.
"I need to play a little bit better tomorrow."