
Robert MacIntyre has ‘100 per cent' belief he can win the US Open
The Scot, from Oban, put in a controlled performance to card a 69, to sit on three over, six shots behind leaders Sam Burns and JJ Spaun when they were midway through their third round.
It might have been even better for MacIntyre as he had got down to one over after 12 holes but a spate of bogeys in the final six holes saw him drift back out.
But he still believes he is in contention win a first major.
Asked if he can win, he replied: 'One hundred per cent. I wouldn't be here if I didn't believe that, it's a simple answer, yes.
'I'm just delighted to be in it, going into tomorrow if I can shoot the number I know I can shoot then why can't it be me?
'I have been playing really well this year, another round to go, I have put three solid rounds together so far.
'Tomorrow I have got to go out there, give it my best, don't try and focus too much on trying to win, just go out there, hit the shots, then come 15, 16, see where are sitting and decide whether to roll the dice or not.'
Heavy rain overnight and throughout the morning had made the brutal Oakmont course slightly more playable but it still presented its challenges.
'It was still difficult,' MacIntyre added. 'It is a little bit softer so when you're on the fairway it gives you more of an opportunity, but I think the rough is even thicker with the water.
'I felt there was a low number with the way I was playing, I was playing beautifully out there.
'The key to this golf course is just be on the fairway. It is the priority and then you can go from there.'
Tyrrell Hatton was also presenting British interest as a spate of birdies propelled him up the leaderboard.
The 33-year-old Englishman, who started on three over, went one under at the 10th, 11th and 12th to move up level par midway through the third round.
It is as you were for world number one Scottie Scheffler, who carded an even-par 70.
Scheffler maintained he was still in contention after Friday's second round but failed to make any ground on the leaders, his three birdies cancelled out by three bogeys.

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Wales Online
42 minutes ago
- Wales Online
Wales rugby greats sing iconic song together to help famous Welsh club after historic season
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
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The Herald Scotland
3 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Scots icon revered in Manchester just loved beating England
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It was 'the classic spartan Scottish upbringing of the time', Law recalled. Clothes on tick, comb-and-paper music, a Dinky car and a tangerine for Christmas. Barefoot until he was 12, he wore hand-me-down shoes throughout adolescence. At 16, he got his first football boots, a second-hand birthday present from a neighbour. He supported Aberdeen and watched them when he'd enough money. Eschewed Aberdeen Grammar, because it played rugby, he attended Powis Academy instead. A bad squint earned him the nickname 'Cockeye', but he showed promise on the pitch and was selected for Scotland Schoolboys. TRIAL BY LAW SOON, he was spotted by a scout for second division Huddersfield Town, who invited the youngster to a trial ('12 bloody hours' by train from Aberdeen). At Huddersfield station, a club official greeted the small, slim, speccy 15-year-old: 'You're Law? Really?' The manager declared: 'The boy's a freak. Never did I see a less likely football prospect – weak, puny and bespectacled.' Still, they signed him on a wage of £4 a week (leaving £1 after digs and sending money home). They also got him an operation to correct his squint, enhancing his self-confidence. On his debut, Huddersfield's youngest ever player at 16, he scored in a 2–1 win over Notts County. Manchester United manager Matt Busby tried buying him for £10,000 (£300,000-odd today)] but Huddersfield turned him down. Later Huddersfield manager Bill Shankly wanted to take him to Liverpool with him, but the Merseyside giants couldn't afford him. Changed days. In 1960, Law signed for Manchester City for a then British record fee of £55,000 (about 1.7 million squids today), of which Law saw though 'precisely nothing'. He scored on his debut against Leeds but excelled himself with six goals in a cup tie against Luton. However, the match was abandoned with 20 minutes to go, so his six goals didn't count. Luton won the replay 3–1, Law scoring City's a year at Maine Road, he was sold to Italian club Torino for – yep – another British record of £110,000 (3 million-odd today). Crowds at Torino airport greeted him like a movie star, but Italy was a culture shock: luxury hotels, medical attention, sports science (though the captain smoked a pipe), obsessive media. And big money, though it was performance-related: feast or football was (is) dull, joyless, ultra-defensive. Denis was heavily marked and aggressively tackled. Soon, he put in a transfer request, which was ignored. He left anyway, flying home to Aberdeen and signing for Manchester United for – all together now – a new British record fee of £115,000. Not that Torino had been a complete waste of time. He returned with a range of operatic gestures, 'along with a liking for pink shirts and Pinot Noir'. Back in Manchester, Law boarded with the same landlady as before. He scored a hat-trick in a 5–0 win against his old club Huddersfield and the first goal against Leicester as United won 3–1 in the only FA Cup final of his career. He finished season 1963-4 with 46 goals, still a club record, and scored 28 the following season as Man U won the league. In 1968, United won the European Cup for the first time, but a recurrent sair knee meant Law missed the match and, indeed, almost all of season 1969-70. AMBITIOUS GOALS AFTER 11 years at United, during which he'd scored 237 goals in 404 games – placing him third in the club's history, behind Wayne Rooney and Bobby Charlton – Law signed for Manchester City the last game of the 1973-74 season, City played United, who were fighting relegation. On the 81st minute, Law back-heeled one in for City but refused to celebrate. As it turned out, his angst was academic. Other results means United were going down much for club football. Law's greatest love was pulling on a Scotland shirt – 'most of all against England'. His 'blackest day' was playing in a 9-3 defeat to the Auld Enemy in 1961. His happiest day was scoring in Scotland's famous 3–2 victory less than a year after England had become world champions in 1966 – a game Law didn't watch, playing golf instead. READ MORE: Robert McNeil: I detest yon Romans but I dig excavating their wee fortlets RAB MCNEIL'S SCOTTISH ICONS: John Knox – the fiery preacher whose pal got burnt at the stake Rab McNeil: All this talk about celebs and their neuroses is getting on my nerves In the 1974 World Cup, Law played in Scotland's first match against Zaire. It was to be his last. Scotland won 2-0 but he didn't score and was "very disappointed" not to be picked for the following matches against Brazil and Yugoslavia. He had played for Scotland 55 times and holds the country's record tally of 30 goals jointly with Kenny Dalglish. So much for posterity, which has deservedly been kind to him. In 2016, he became a CBE, taking command of the British Empire. And there are statues: two at Old Trafford and two in Aberdeen. At an unveiling in his home city in 2012, he choked back tears as he declared: 'I will always be an Aberdonian.' At the unveiling of a second city statue at Marischal Square in 2021, legendary Aberdeen and Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson told the crowd: 'He was the greatest Scots player of all time, no question.'