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US PGA Championship 2026 golf: third round – as it happened
Scott Murray · 2026-05-17 · via The Guardian
Alex Smalley

Alex Smalley hit the front on day three. Photograph: Matt Slocum/AP

Alex Smalley hit the front on day three. Photograph: Matt Slocum/AP

Key events

So this is how the leaderboard looks after Moving Day. A fair chance of a play-off tomorrow, do you think?! Hope you’ll join us for the final round. Thanks for reading; nighty night.

-6: Alex Smalley
-4: Matti Schmid, Nick Taylor, Jon Rahm, Aaron Rai, Ludvig Åberg
-3: Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Reed, Maverick McNealy
-2: Kristoffer Reitan, Chris Kirk, Justin Rose, Joaquin Niemann, Martin Kaymer, Bud Cauley, Ben Griffin, Cameron Smith, Min Woo Lee, Max Greyserman, Hideki Matsuyama, Chris Gotterup
-1: Brian Harman, Mikael Lindberg, Sam Burns, Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Harris English, Scottie Scheffler, David Puig

Smalley the 54-hole leader after his 68

Alex Smalley is left with a 13-foot left-to-right drifter for birdie. And in it goes! Never missing! He’s worn an ice-cool expression all day, but allows himself a smile now! Just a magnificent round, given the way he nervously started it with three bogeys in the first four holes. He’s got a two-shot lead going into the final day of the PGA!

-6: Smalley (F)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (F)

Alex Smalley plays a shot
Alex Smalley’s two-under round puts him in charge of the tournament. Photograph: Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Maverick McNealy’s par attempt is always staying up on the left. It’s a two-putt bogey. He signs for a 71, and ends the day at -3.

McNealy becomes the latest player to take a bit too much sand from these bunkers on 18. The pressure of coming up the last at a major. He finds the green, but he’s not close. A big two-putt coming up to limit the damage to bogey.

A prediction for tomorrow from Ludvig Åberg on Sky: “The guy who runs away with it is going to have a hot putter.”

Ludvig Åberg reacts after a putt
Ludvig Åberg on his way to a round of 68 that keeps him in the thick of it for Sunday. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

Smalley up first. Centre-right of the fairway, 177 yards to the hole. He eases his iron 20 feet left of the flag. This has been a hell of a comeback. Then over to McNealy, whose ball is on the slope down to the bunker, in thick rough, with his feet a long way above. This is far from easy, with the possibility of a shank in the equation. So it’s not a bad result when his ball squirts forward and into a greenside bunker. It’s the percentage miss.

McNealy sends his driver on 18 towards the big bunker down the right … and will wish his ball went into it, because it stops on the downslope to the left, inches from the edge of the trap. He’ll not have a great stance. Smalley is smarter, taking 3-wood to find the fatter part of the fairway. Meanwhile up on the green, it’s pars for Matsuyama and Gotterup, and both end the day with 71s, at -2 overall.

Smalley’s downhill left-to-right slider doesn’t do enough sliding left to right. It stays awkwardly up on the high side. Bogey. Par for McNealy.

-5: Smalley (17)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (F), McNealy (17)

Smalley catches his bunker shot a little bit too cleanly, the ball zipping 15 feet past the flag. But the camber of the green brings it back a little bit. Ten feet left. Then McNealy bundles his wedge from the fringe to six feet. Both left with a job to do.

Smalley and McNealy take turns in missing the par-three 17th green. The former goes into a bunker front right, though it’s sitting up; the latter ends up in the first cut back right, but that’s caught a half-decent lie as well.

Hideki Matsuyama hands a shot back by missing a tiddler for par at 17. His partner Chris Gotterup also drops a stroke, duffing a chip from – yes – the back of the green. That’s his third best-forgotten moment involving wedges from thick greenside rough on this back nine. They’re both -2 now.

Smalley’s eagle effort, a big right to left swinger through a couple of indentations, is pretty good. But not stone dead. He’ll have a little bit of work to do from six feet if he wants his birdie. No problem. In it goes. McNealy meanwhile gets up and down from a bunker for a birdie of his own. They’re -6 and -4 respectively. And up on 18, Min Woo Lee rakes one in from downtown to sign for a 71 that keeps him within striking distance at -1.

-6: Smalley (16)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (F), McNealy (16)

After all this bunched-up craziness, wouldn’t it be something if one player makes a break for it at the death? Because here’s Alex Smalley, cracking a long iron from the first cut down the right of the par-five 16th, 213 yards out, over the bunker guarding the front left, and into the heart of the green! He’ll have a 50-foot look for an eagle that would take him three clear of the field. This isn’t breaking news, but golf can be real weird sometimes.

Hideki Matsuyama is another player on the comeback trail! Out of sight and mind for most of the round, the 2021 Masters champion steers in an uphill right-to-left putt from the fringe at the back of the par-five 16th for eagle! That follows birdie at 14, and all of a sudden he’s back to -3 and right in this tournament! Meanwhile more chipping-from-cabbage-at-the-back-of-the-green woes for his playing partner Chris Gotterup: he nearly flies the green with his whip out, and with it goes his chances of birdie. Just the par. Both are -3, and one is much happier than the other.

Hideki Matsuyama hits from a bunker on the 13th
Hideki Matsuyama hits from a bunker on the 13th. Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP

Alex Smalley cracks a drive down 15. Then an iron into the centre of the green. Then he steers in a gentle left-to-right uphill slider from 30 feet. An amble from tee to flag, straight down the middle of the hole, as simple as it gets! And this is some recovery from the 29-year-old, after those bogeys at 1, 2 and 4! He’s now in credit for his round, and holds the lead all by himself. Meanwhile his playing partner Maverick McNealy carves his second into sand, gets nowhere near with his splash out, and makes bogey. A two-stroke matchplay swing in the final match!

-5: Smalley (15)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (F)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Reed (F), McNealy (15), Gotterup (15)

Max Greyserman’s tee shot at 17 disappears into the vegetation at the back of the green. He lobs out, but not quite far enough to plop onto the fringe, and the first cut takes nearly all of the juice out of the ball. It does squeak onto the edge of the putting surface, just, but two putts later, that’s cost him a shot. He slips to -2.

Scheffler bogeys last for 71

Scottie Scheffler seems suddenly bereft of energy! He takes Texas wedge from just off the front of 18 … and severely underhits the putt, nine feet short! This has to go in, surely … and he steers the gentle left-to-right slider in for a damage-limiting bogey. That’s a rare shaft of light glinting from Scottie’s putter today, though it put him in that trouble in the first place. A 71, and he ends the day at -1. Just three off the lead, but with the leaderboard so crowded, the odds are stacked against him tomorrow unless he does something extremely special. Which, well, y’know … it’s not beyond the realms, is it?

McNealy and Smalley have plenty of green to work with, and both whisk their wedges out of the trap and down the slope to a couple of feet. Par, par, we move on. Then back to 18 … and Scheffler’s mojo, having threatened to desert him all day, finally does one. Sheffler’s third, a wedge up onto the green, hits the false front and dribbles back off. Can’t recall the last time he did something like that. A big up and down for Scheffler coming up; he can’t risk a double bogey, surely, with so many players in front of him on the leaderboard.

Alex Smalley
Alex Smalley has enjoyed a fine back nine. Photograph: Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Maverick McNealy and Alex Smalley having followed each other into the cup on 13, now send their tee shots at 14 into the same bunker, front left. Meanwhile up on 18, Scottie Scheffler sends his drive into a fairway bunker down the right, and fails to reach the green with his splash out. All a bit careless.

Maverick McNealy joins the leaders! He walks in a 20-footer on 13. And then … Alex Smalley joins the leaders! He cleans up having wedged his second to five feet, and having started with three bogeys in the first four holes, the 29-year-old from Greensboro has battled back to where he started the day. Chris Gotterup meanwhile has a chance to do the same on the par-three 14th, but his 14-foot effort never looks like dropping. Gotterup remains at -3.

-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (F), McNealy (13), Smalley (13)

Maverick McNealy plays a shot
Maverick McNealy joins the fun at the top of the leaderboard. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

Ludvig Åberg couldn’t make his birdie on 17 … and it’s close but no cigar on 18 as well. But that’s a par-par finish, and he’s now in the clubhouse with a 68. A five-way tie at the top. Meanwhile Scottie Scheffler still can’t purchase one of those delicious birdies, a 30-foot rake across 17 drifting millimetres wide right. So close. More irritation, but despite a round during which he must have felt like wading through quicksand, he’s still level par for the day and just two off that five-way lead.

Scottie Scheffler can’t buy a putt today. He whips out of a deep bunker guarding the front of the par-five 16th, but can’t make the seven-footer he’s left with, the ball horseshoeing out. A bit of frustration creeping in.

67 for Rai

Aaron Rai gathers himself and wedges from just off the front of the 18th green to three feet. He cleans up for bogey, and he did extremely well to limit the damage there. A 67, and the 31-year-old from Wolverhampton is in with a great shout of becoming the first English winner of the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes in 1919. And while a dropped shot can never be ideal, avoiding the glare and pressure of being in the final group isn’t the worst outcome in the world. Silver linings, all that.

-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Rai (F), Åberg (17)

Aaron Rai acknowledges spectators on the 18th
Aaron Rai escaped from a nervy end to his round. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

In fact Rai is 67 yards from the flag. But the exact yardage is neither here nor there, because he gets nowhere near the green with his splash out, decelerating and taking way too much sand. Every amateur golfer will feel his pain. This is going to cost him any chance of a place in the final group tomorrow.

Aaron Rai’s ball is tangled up in rough … and yet he considers it sitting up well enough to take his hybrid out. He fires it out low and hard, hoping to send the ball scuttling onto the putting surface, but he shoves it to the right, and it disappears into a bunker 50 yards shy of the green. Trouble ahoy.

Aaron Rai almost hooks his drive at 18 into the thick rough down the left. He trudges off after it. Meanwhile back on 17, Ludvig Åberg clips his tee shot pin high, and will have a look at birdie from 25 feet.

Ludvig Åberg sends a gentle fade into the par-five 16th. Pin high. But the 13-foot eagle putt somehow stays up on the left lip. Half a dimple to the right and that was dropping. He can’t believe it. That looked in all the way. Shame, because the approach deserved the eagle. The birdie takes him up to -4, though. Meanwhile Rai and Gotterup lag long putts to kick-in distance, on 17 and 11 respectively. Rai will be delighted to get through the treacherous 17th with his par; Gotterup will be reasonably pleased to have limited the damage to bogey, because that could have gotten ugly real quick. They’re -5 and -3 respectively.

The wind’s back up a little bit. Not dramatically so, but it’s got a bit of whip again. So hats off to Aaron Rai for finding the heart of the par-three 17th amid the swirl. Meanwhile back on 11, Chris Gotterup makes the fatal error of plonking his approach into the thick rough covering a hill behind the green. He has to whip out forcefully enough to get his ball out of the gunk, but land it softly on the fringe so it doesn’t dribble down the sloping green too much. He does all he can, chopping the ball high and sitting it down gently on the fringe, but it still rolls 50 feet past the flag. At least it didn’t keep going off the green, and like I say, the mistake was putting the ball in there in the first place.

… and back on 16, Rai isn’t able to make the 15-footer he’s left himself for birdie, but tidies up for par. Three-putting never feels good, but doing so from 82 feet draws a bit of the sting.

-5: Rai (15)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (F), Gotterup (10)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Reed (F), Åberg (15), Greyserman (12), McNealy (10), Smalley (10)

Rahm shoots 67

… there’s some disappointment for Jon Rahm on the last. He’s left with a three-footer for par, and he gives the putt a wee bit too much welly, playing through the gentle left-to-right break. It horseshoes out and that’s a bogey to finish. He’s -4 and Aaron Rai has the lead all to himself now.

Jon Rahm ends with a bogey on the 18th
Jon Rahm ends with a bogey on the 18th. Photograph: Frank Franklin II/AP

At 554 yards, the par-five 16th is a whopping three yards longer than the par-four 15th. That’s just the way it is. And while Aaron Rai was unable to get a full connection to his second shot at 15 from rough down the left, on 16 he’s able, from a similar position, to arrow a low runner that scampers all the way onto the front of the green. But the putting surface is huge, and he’s left with an 80-footer for his eagle. He gets nowhere close. And I mean nowhere. Still a long way to go with his second putt. More on that anon, though, because …

A slightly disappointing end to the round for Patrick Reed. After birdies at 13 and 16, he appears to be closing out his third round in style as he screeches his approach at 18 from 147 yards pin high to four feet. But he misreads the birdie putt, which doesn’t drift left to right as he’d expected. That’s a 67, though, and at -3 overall the 2018 Masters champion is not out of this.

-5: Rahm (17), Rai (15), Gotterup (9)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Reed (F), Åberg (14), Greyserman (11), McNealy (9)

Patrick Reed plays a shot
Patrick Reed will go into the final round in touch with the lead. Photograph: Matt Slocum/AP

Scottie Scheffler grips down on a 3-wood at the driveable par-four 13th. His tee shot trundles through the dancefloor and off the back, into deep nonsense. He still swishes out to four feet … but the old putter woes resurface, as he dribbles a weak effort wide left. That’s a poor miss. A par that’ll feel like a bogey.

Aaron Rai looks to be in a spot of bother on the monster 551-yard 15th, the longest par-four in major championship history. His drive disappears into the rough down the left, and he’s forced to gouge out. But left with 108 yards, he lands his wedge a few feet past the hole and spins it back to 17 inches. He’ll tidy that up for a par that’ll feel like a birdie.

Chris Gotterup has been going about his business quietly. Now he hits the turn in 33, after birdies at 6 and 9. He joins Aaron Rai in the lead at -5 … as does Jon Rahm, who birdies the other par-five on the course, the 16th. Gotterup and Rahm become the 43rd and 44th [subs please check] players to lead this tournament today.

Chris Gotterup catches a ball
Chris Gotterup is in the thick of the third-round action at the top of the leaderboard. Photograph: Matt Slocum/AP

Scottie Scheffler is re-energised. From the bunker guarding the front of 12, he splashes out to kick-in distance. For a split second, the ball looks like dropping for another birdie, but stubbornly shaves the lip. Scottie spins round with great god-darn-it feeling. He thought that was in. But he’s still just three off the lead at -2, and the wind’s dropped a bit, so field watch out.

Problems for Min Woo Lee at the par-five 9th. He’s over the back of the green, and he’s unable to get back up with his chip. He ends up with a double-bogey seven, dropping to -1 overall. Meanwhile on the huge 8th green, Maverick McNealy leaves himself a 100-foot putt (!) and clatters it eight feet past and wide left. He can’t make the next one, and there goes that blemish-free run of pars. He’s -3. But Aaron Rai makes a nerveless save on 14, despite knocking his first putt six feet long. Rai still holds the sole lead at -5.

Finally some positive momentum for Scottie Scheffler. He wedges his approach at 11 over the flag to ten feet, and steers in the downhill swinger, with big right-to-left movement. Very well judged, especially in the context of the much easier putts he’s missed this afternoon, and he pumps the air gently with his fist as the ball drops. He’s back where he started the day at -2.

An incredibly careless three-putt bogey from 15 feet by Ludvig Åberg on 12. Maverick McNealy makes a graceful sandy save from a deep bunker at 7, without too much green to work with. That’s his seventh par in a row today. The new pretender to Nick Faldo’s crown? Because Stephan Jaeger is busy ruining his own steady-as-she-goes reputation: after that run of 29 consecutive pars was broken by birdie, he’s then carded back-to-back bogeys, at 7 and 8, to drop away to -2.

Ludvig Åberg lines up a putt
Ludvig Åberg has had plenty to think about today. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

Birdie for Jon Rahm on 14. Reward for a tee shot at the par-three sent from 203 yards to 13 feet, and a putt rodded home. Meanwhile news of a disastrous finish to Justin Thomas’s front nine: bogeys at 7, 8 and 9, and he clatters down the standings to -1.

-5: Rai (12)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (F), Rahm (14), Åberg (11), Gotterup (7), McNealy (7)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Lee (8), Greyserman (8)

Jon Rahm acknowledges spectators
Jon Rahm is on the move. Photograph: Matt Slocum/AP

Taylor cards 65

Nick Taylor finds the heart of 18 in regulation, and has a 12-footer for birdie and a share of the lead. But he lets the putt slip by. Par, though, and he’s the latest player to scribble his name at the bottom of a 65. His playing partner and compatriot Corey Conners let things slip dreadfully, though: having made it up the leaderboard to -3, thanks in no small part to four consecutive birdies, 3 through 7, he bogeyed six of the last seven holes to sign for a spirit-sapping 72. He’s +3.

Nick Taylor lines up a putt
Nick Taylor’s par on the 18th green sealed a round of 65. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

When Justin Thomas won his second PGA four years ago, he came back from a seven-shot deficit after 54 holes. That matched the PGA Championship record set by John Mahaffey in 1978. Thing is, there were just six players above Thomas on the leaderboard at that point; when Mahaffey did it, there were just four above him. Now this is purely for illustrative purposes, but right now there are 55 players within seven shots of the lead. Should Aaron Rai drop a shot, there’d be 65. Not entirely sure what I’m trying to say here, other than this leaderboard is glorious nonsense … and nobody will be coming back from seven behind this week, you can be pretty sure of that.

Schmid shoots 65

Matti Schmid pars the last to sign for a wonderful 65. It’s extra-special, as Paul McGinley on Sky points out, given he’s completed half of that round in wind stronger than the earlier starters played in. At -4, Schmid takes over the clubhouse lead from Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele.

No, hold on, make that four off the lead … because Aaron Rai rolls in a 15-footer on 11 for his third birdie on the bounce, and the popular Englishman grabs the lead for himself! Given no English player has won this title since Jim Barnes in 1919, I’ll have to update the leaderboard now. Because just look at it!

-5: Rai (11)
-4: Schmid (F), Taylor (16), Åberg (10), Jaeger (6), Gotterup (5), McNealy (5)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Rahm (12), Lee (7), Greyserman (7)

Aaron Rai plays a shot
Aaron Rai took the lead after the 11th on day three. Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP

Scottie Scheffler can only par the par-five 9th, and he turns in 36 strokes. Not the performance anyone expected. And yet he’s just three off the lead at -1.

Chris Gotterup joins the leaders. Birdie at 6. This is getting old. I’m not updating the leaderboard yet. I’m not sulking, I just … I just can’t. I will soon, promise.

… so how did Stephan Jaeger join the leaders? Well, the simple answer is, with birdie at 6. But what’s really eye-opening is that the birdie snaps a run of 29 consecutive pars. That run makes Nick Faldo look like Maurice Flitcroft.

Make that a round dozen. The 38-year-old Canadian Nick Taylor is on a heater: birdies at 3, 6, 9, 14 and now 16, and he’s joined the ever-growing pack at -4. Two pars and he’ll match Kristoffer Reitan, Chris Kirk and Justin Rose’s best-of-day 65s. Meanwhile one par for Matti Schmid and he’ll have done that, after parring 17.

-4: Schmid (17), Taylor (16), Rai (10), Åberg (9), Jaeger (6), McNealy (4)

It’s been an up-and-down round for Min Woo Lee so far. Bogeys at 3 and 4, followed by birdies at 5 and 6. The latter birdie was a swashbuckling affair: a 380-yard tee shot at the driveable par-four, into the heart of the green … then an aggressive eagle putt that races six feet past. But he makes the one coming back … and now he’s set up another birdie chance at 7. Meanwhile back-to-back birdies for Aaron Rai, at 9 and 10, and according to Sky Sports (because I’m certainly not going back to count) he becomes the 11th different leader today! It’s quite the leaderboard all right.

Min Woo Lee plays an approach shot on the 1st
Min Woo Lee plays an approach shot on the 1st. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

Matti Schmid is looking to become just the third male major champion of all time, behind Bernard Langer and Martin Kaymer. The 28-year-old hasn’t come close before: his silver medal for low amateur at the 2021 Open at Sandwich, which saw him finish in a tie for 59th, is still his best effort in any major. But on PGA Championship debut this week, he’s finally making his presence felt. Birdies at 13, 14 and now 16 have whisked him into a share of the lead. And he’s joined there by Ludvig Åberg, after birdies at 4, 6 and 9. Many think Åberg’s major breakthrough, which surely will happen sooner or later, is most likely to come at Augusta, but here we are. This is quite the leaderboard.

-4: Schmid (16), Åberg (9), McNealy (3)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Taylor (15), Rahm (11), Rai (9), Thomas (7), Lee (6), Jaeger (5), Gotterup (4)
-2: 15 players, life’s still going along at way too quickly a clip

Scottie Scheffler follows up one three-putt bogey with another. His tee shot into the par-three 8th nearly finds a bunker at the front. Instead it pings off the shoulder, to the right and then back to the front of the big green. His first putt up and over a ridge sails five feet wide left, and his uncertain par prod dribbles wide right of the green. Some shocked mumbling from the gallery, who haven’t seen Scottie putt like this since the early stage of his career, before something clicked with the flat stick and he went stellar. He’s back down to -1, and his expected charge across this supposedly easier front nine simply hasn’t materialised.

Scottie Scheffler
Scottie Scheffler endured a tricky start. Photograph: Laurence Kesterson/UPI/Shutterstock

The wind is beginning to pick up now. Flags whipping. Trouser legs flapping. It’s not causing Justin Thomas any problems yet, though. The two-time champion birdies 5 and 6 to join the leaders. Meanwhile up on 18, Xander Schauffele pars the last to match Rory McIlroy’s 66, while Rickie Fowler signs for a blemish-free 68. They’re -3 and -1 respectively.

-4: Rahm (10), Thomas (6), McNealy (2)
-3: McIlroy (F), Schauffele (F), Schmid (15), Taylor (14), Åberg (8), Jaeger (4), Gotterup (3)
-2: 17 players, life’s too short

A careless bogey for Scottie Scheffler on 7. He gets a good break with his drive, which looked to be heading for the rough, but takes a bounce back onto the fairway. But he doesn’t take advantage. Distance control uncharacteristically awry, he flies the flag, and can’t get down in two putts from a higher portion of the green. Back to -2 for Scottie, and gaining and keeping momentum has been an issue for the world number one all week. Meanwhile Aldrich Potgieter fails to get up and down from greenside sand at 3 and hands the shot he’d just picked up straight back to the field. He slips out of the joint lead.

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