Scottie Scheffler bursts clear of US PGA third-round field at Quail Hollow
Majors are often won as Saturday shadows lengthen. It feels as if we have again witnessed precisely that.
Quail Hollow's devilish last three holes, the Green Mile, can ruin tournament aspirations. Scottie Scheffler decided to play that stretch in two under par. The world No 1 had already produced an outrageous eagle at the 14th and birdied the next. Five holes, five under. Catch him if you can.
Scheffler's 65 and 11-under-par total means this US PGA Championship is suddenly his to lose. He leads Alex Norán by three in Charlotte. Daylight, such valuable daylight to a player of Scheffler's strength. It is almost as if he has making up to do; a year ago, his US PGA plan was disrupted by an arrest outside the gates of Valhalla. This is far more familiar stuff.
History is on Scheffler's side. On the previous two occasions he has held 54-hole major leads, both at Augusta National, he has won. There feels inevitability about what comes next. Norén has never won a major before. Neither have JT Poston, Kim Si-woo or Jhonattan Vegas. Jon Rahm is six under and not without hope or motivation. Including, that is, in proving his switch to LIV Golf has not undermined his major chances. The odds of toppling Scheffler in this mood, though, are long.
'It is hard to express how hungry I may be for a major,' Rahm said. 'About as hungry as anybody can be in this situation.
'Me going to LIV and playing worse in majors had nothing to do with where I was playing golf. My swing was simply not at the level it had to be for me to compete. It's easier to post a score on non-major championship courses and venues, and I think when you get to the biggest stages like this one and these courses, those flaws are going to get exposed.
'There's been weeks where I was able to play better, like the Open last year. The Masters wasn't a good start but it got better as the week was on and I'm still working and trying to get my swing to a better spot.
'I would say even in 2023, after winning the Masters, I did not play good at all until the Ryder Cup. So I think the problems began earlier than people think. But I'm now getting closer to a position of being comfortable. I think this week so far and this round has been a show of it.'
As Rahm spoke, Scheffler was pressing upon the accelerator. This was his 25th major round in the 60s since 2022. These three in a row – 69, 68, 65 – will scare the field. And yet, Scheffler was merely one under for his day on the 14th tee. There, he cracked a three-wood from 304 yards to within 3ft of the cup. It was the moment of this slow burning major.
'I battled hard out there, it was really tough today,' Scheffler said. 'The winds were really gusting, the greens firmed up but I did a good job of staying patient. I struck the ball a lot better than in the first couple of rounds.
'I wanted to finish off the round the right way. I was able to find some momentum there. I need more good golf, I need to stay in the present. I have a lot of very good players chasing me on the leaderboard.'
Rahm's fellow LIV man Bryson DeChambeau is a shot further back, a situation that would be even better but for a horrible finish. DeChambeau three-putted the 16th and found water on 17. When asked about his level of frustration, he replied: 'That's why golf is the worst four-letter word in the world.' DeChambeau at one point held the lead. His 69 represented poor return.
Related: US PGA Championship golf 2025: day three – as it happened
Keegan Bradley, the US Ryder Cup captain, has matched DeChambeau's total. There may yet be a serious conversation to be had over whether Bradley should play or direct operations at Bethpage later this year.
Rory McIlroy's 72 means he is playing for a place at two over. The Northern Irishman can already turn attentions towards next month's US Open, when the noise associated with Masters glory will have quietened down somewhat. Those to make round three headway included Matt Wallace and Adam Scott. Matt Fitzpatrick is in the five-under group after a 72.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
28 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Chicago Bears Weigh Sale of McKenna's Minority Stake
The Chicago Bears are exploring a sale of the minority stake owned by the late Andrew McKenna Sr., according to people familiar with the matter. The exact size of the stake isn't known. McKenna died in 2023. The descendants of George Halas, the team's founder, own approximately 80% of the team. In addition to McKenna's stake, some shares are owned by insurance billionaire Pat Ryan, 88. Ryan and McKenna originally purchased 19.7% of the club in 1990.

Associated Press
35 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Rangers sign veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel to a minor-league contract
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Texas Rangers signed veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel to a minor-league contract Wednesday. The 37-year-old Kimbrel will report to Triple-A Round Rock this week. Kimbrel pitched one scoreless inning with the Atlanta Braves before being designated for assignment last week. He opted for free agency instead of having the club send him outright to its Triple-A Gwinnett affiliate. The right-hander is a nine-time All-Star and won a World Series title with Boston in 2018. He has pitched parts of 16 seasons in the majors with for eight teams. He has 440 saves in 838 career appearances. Kimbrel was with Baltimore last season. ___ AP MLB:

Associated Press
35 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Blue Jays third baseman Ernie Clement leaves game in 9th after banging knee diving for a grounder
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Blue Jays third baseman Ernie Clement left in the ninth inning Wednesday against St. Louis after banging his knee in the eighth when he dove for a grounder. Clement needed some attention but finished the inning. He was replaced in the field by Addison Barger for the ninth, and Toronto beat the Cardinals 5-2. After the game, in an on-field interview with broadcaster Sportsnet, Blue Jays manager John Schneider said: 'Ernie's a hockey player. He should be fine. We just wanted to be careful with him and not make it worse.' Clement had three hits, including his fourth homer of the season that gave Toronto a 5-2 lead in the fifth. He raised his batting average to .280 for the season. ___ AP MLB: