Scheffler four clear ahead of final round – The Open

Round 3

Scottie Scheffler moved a big step closer to a second major victory of the season and a third leg of the career Grand Slam by taking a four-shot lead into the final round of The Open.

The world No 1 held a one-shot halfway lead and never relinquished control in another impressive display, a bogey-free 67 lifting him to 14 under and giving him full control at Royal Portrush.

Scheffler found an eagle-birdie run to move ahead of playing partner Matt Fitzpatrick and followed two impressive par-saves on his back nine by adding another birdie, giving him a commanding advantage over China’s Haotong Li.

Fitzpatrick briefly jumped level with Scheffler but heads into the final day five strokes back in third, while Rory McIlroy – chasing a second major win of the season – jumped to tied-fourth after delighting home fans with a third-round 66.

McIlroy charged up the leaderboard to give himself an outside chance.

McIlroy shares fourth spot with Tyrrell Hatton, Chris Gotterup and Harris English on eight under, with Scheffler now on the verge of matching the efforts of Xander Schauffele – seven strokes back in eighth – by winning the PGA Championship and The Open in the same season.

Scheffler’s lead doubled when Fitzpatrick made a three-putt bogey at the first but the world No 1 made a three-putt of his own at the par-five next, missing a four-foot birdie putt and seeing Fitzpatrick pull level with a chip-in eagle from off the green.

He needed to hole from 10 feet to match Fitzpatrick’s par at the third, as the chasing pack closed on the final group, only for Scheffler to hit the front by rolling in a 10-foot eagle at the par-five seventh.

Fitzpatrick got up and down from off the green to birdie the same hole but found himself two back when Scheffler made a 15-foot birdie at the par-four next, with the Englishman then falling further behind with a bogey at the par-four 11th.

Scheffler was in a class of his own as he took control of the links.

Scheffler recovered from a wayward tee shot to save par from 10 feet, keeping him at 13 under, with Li moving into solo second when he birdied the 14th and Fitzpatrick failed to save par from four feet at the 13th.

A possible Scheffler stumble at the 14th – following a wayward drive – was averted when he hacked out of the rough back onto the fairway and got up and down again, holing from 10 feet to save par, but saw his lead reduced when Fitzpatrick birdied the next.

The American responded by converting from 15 feet to birdie the par-three 16th for the third consecutive day, which gave him a four-shot buffer when Li cancelled out a birdie at the 17th with a final-hole blemish, with Fitzpatrick falling five behind after a penultimate-hole bogey dropped him back to nine under.

China’s Li Haotong will feature in the final group for the first time at a major.

Scheffler has converted each of his previous 54-hole leads in majors, winning The Masters in both 2022 and 2024 before claiming the PGA Championship in May, with the 29-year-old now on the verge of another landmark victory.

Li posted a two-under 69 to join Scheffler in the final group, while McIlroy birdied three of his first four holes and cancelled out a bizarre bogey at the 11th with a 56-foot eagle at the next on his way to a five-under 66.

Gotterup, English and Hatton all posted third-round 68s to also get to eight under, while Russell Henley fired a round-of-the-day 65 to join Nicolai Hojgaard, Ramsus Hojgaard, Bob MacIntyre and 2023 champion Brian Harman in a share of ninth.

Lee Westwood carded six birdies in a back-nine 29 to jump to five under alongside compatriots Justin Rose, Harry Hall and Matt Wallace, while Shane Lowry – who was handed a two-shot penalty after his second round – struggled with illness during a three-over 74.


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