The Open 2023: third round – as it happened | The Open

Key events

Plenty of moving on Moving Day, then … just not at the very top of the leaderboard. The Masters champion Jon Rahm broke Hoylake’s Open record with 63, while Cameron Young carded a fine 66 that lifted last year’s runner-up into contention. But the leader Brian Harman steadied the ship after dropping two shots in the first four holes, making four birdies from there on in to retain a five-stroke cushion at the top. Only two players in history have held such a big lead at the 54-hole stage and not gone on to win the Open: MacDonald Smith in 1925 and Jean Van de Velde in 1999. So we’re either going to see Harmon become the second player from the state of Georgia to win at Hoylake, after the great Bobby Jones … or witness something very dramatic and extremely memorable indeed. Sleep well Brian! See you all tomorrow!

-12: Harman
-7: Young
-6: Rahm
-5: Hovland, Rozner, Day, Straka, Fleetwood
-4: A Fitzpatrick, Sharma
-3: Detry, Kim, Hojgaard, Jordan, McIlroy, Grillo
-2: M Fitzpatrick, Im, Langasque, Matsuyama, Homa, Spieth, Lee

Brian Harman in with 69

Then the leader Brian Harman. In fact he’s got an eight-and-a-half foot putt … and he rolls it in confidently. Never missing! He walks off having shot 69 with the look of a man who knows he got away with one down the last … but he deserves his luck, because the way he bounced back after a very rocky opening four holes was the sort of stuff that Champion Golfers are made of. He’s got a five-shot lead going into the final round!

-12: Harman
-7: Young

Tommy Fleetwood first. He thinks the putt is dead straight; it slides a little to the right. Just a par, and it really hasn’t been Tommy Lad’s day. A second 71 in a row. He goes into Sunday at -5.

Fleetwood only just whips his wedge over the bunkers. Half a yard shorter and he was in a world of sandy pain. He’ll have a look at birdie from 25 feet. But before that it’s over to Harman, who doesn’t quite take advantage of the good lie he’s got lucky with after that poor fairway wood. He leaves his chip ten feet short, and blows out his cheeks in frustration. A couple of big putts coming up here.

Fleetwood’s ball has clanked off the grandstand and pretty much into the drop-zone he’d have been dropping into had it stayed stuck in the bleachers. So that seems fair. He’s 80 yards from the flag. An up and down here and he’ll feel a whole lot better about the world. He’s been pretty down on himself for the last couple of hours.

Brian Harman unleashes a fairway wood from 267 yards. He sends it out to the left of the green, and gets a reasonably fortunate break, his ball nestling in the semi-rough as opposed to the thick stuff. But he’s still got to lob over bunkers to get up and down from 35 yards. Tommy Fleetwood meanwhile, his noggin long gone, sends a snap hook into the grandstand. He’s been all over the shop on this back nine, ragged enough to say that his sequence of one bogey and seven pars since the turn is something of a street-fighting achievement.

Harman’s lie, in thick, wet grass, is appalling. He can only squirt a wedge back onto the fairway. For a second, it’s heart-in-mouth time as his ball flies towards the OB on the other side of the fairway, but it stops in plenty of time. He’ll have a long third in, though. Up on the green, it’s a par for Min Woo Lee, who signs for a 72 that at one point threatened to be a lot worse; he’s -2. And it’s a disappointing bogey for Sepp Straka, who can’t get up and down from the sand. A 70, and he’s -5.

“Beans on toast!” The latest culinary heckle greets Brian Harman’s drive on 18. The leader sends his ball into thick rough down the left. Tommy Fleetwood splits the fairway. Up the hole, Sepp Straka slam-dunks his third into a greenside bunker.

A two-putt par for Tommy Fleetwood on 17. Ditto Brian Harman. Up on 18, Shubhankar Sharma takes his two putts for par, as does Jason Day. A 70 and a 69. Got to say, this blog, and indeed the Open, have served up more exciting moments, but this is where we are.

-12: Harman (17)
-7: Young (F)
-6: Rahm (F), Straka (17)
-5: Hovland (F), Rozner (F), Day (F), Fleetwood (17)
-4: A Fitzpatrick (F), Sharma (F)

Up on 18, Jason Day sends his third shot towards the two bunkers guarding the front left of the green. But his ball just sails over the top, and rolls to 35 feet. Two putts for par and a 69 that could, and probably should, have been better. Shubhankar Sharma is also on in regulation, pin high but also the best part of 35 feet away. He’ll be signing for a 70 should he take two putts for par.

Pars for Sepp Straka and Min Woo Lee at 17. Lee, incidentally, has set about repairing his round with back-to-back birdies at 15 and 16. Having gone out in 38, he’s just one over for his round today now. They’re -6 and -2 respectively. Once they take their leave, Brian Harman and Tommy Fleetwood take turns to nearly go too long … but both of their balls spin back into the heart of the green rather than sailing into the scary dunes behind.

Brian Harman and Tommy Fleetwood both on 16 in regulation. Harman inside Fleetwood, which means the chaser will give the relentless leader the line. Just everything going Harman’s way at the moment. Meanwhile up on 18, Emiliano Grillo nearly drains a 70-footer for birdie, but settles for a tap-in par. A 70 and he goes into Sunday at -3. Becoming the second Argentinian to win an Open at Hoylake after Roberto De Vicenzo is probably beyond him, unless Harman phones in sick tomorrow.

Jason Day plops a gorgeous tee shot into the middle of 17, screwing his ball back to 15 feet. But he can’t quite steer in the gentle right-to-left breaker that remains. Just a par. Shubhankar Sharma goes close too, from 20 feet or so. They remain at -5 and -4, and with the exception of Cameron Young, none of the late starters have made any advance on Brian Harman (who incidentally has just striped one down 16, he looks utterly unflappable at the moment).

Harman’s lie down the right of 15 isn’t too bad. He wedges carefully into the heart of the green, then nearly drains the 40-foot birdie putt that remains. I’d have liked to have seen the affronted look on Fleetwood’s coupon had that dropped. As it is, it’s just a par. Fleetwood then nearly makes his long birdie effort, but par will have to suffice for him as well. He’d have probably taken that when he was stood on the tee box watching his ball sail off for a pint.

Shubhankar Sharma takes his first backwards step of the day. Having flied his approach into 16 over the back, he can’t get up and down and he drops back to -4. Par for Jason Day. When the pair of them vacate the green, Sepp Straka, who has got lucky with his lie down the right on grass trodden flat by the punters, fires pin high. He’ll have a medium-range look at birdie.

From the centre of the 15th fairway, the leader Brian Harman pulls his second into the thick stuff down the right. A small reminder that there’s an awfully long way to go yet. Tommy Fleetwood meanwhile simply concentrates on getting his ball back in play, which he does. Meanwhile on 16, Sepp Straka sends his tee shot into the gallery down the right. All a little bit ragged right now.

Brian Harman sends his drive at the par-five 15th down the middle. Tommy Fleetwood, the pressure telling, hooks his in the direction of some hospitality tents. Meanwhile there’s some footage of Rory McIlroy searching for some answers on the putting green … and we can report that he’s missing short ones there as well. At least he’s consistent. He swishes his putter through the air with great feeling. And no wonder! That club’s cost him any chance of this Open.

A 66 for Cameron Young!

Cameron Young cracks two big hits down 18, but the second squeaks into the bunker front right. No matter! Even though he can only just get a stance, squeezed in between the side of the trap and the ball, he clips crisply to a couple of feet, and that’s a closing birdie for a magnificent 66. The chance of going one better than last year, when he ended in second place at St Andrews, is very much alive. Birdie meanwhile for the 2017 champion Jordan Spieth, but it’s only for a level-par 71. He’s -2.

-12: Harman (14)
-7: Young (F)
-6: Rahm (F), Straka (14)
-5: Hovland (F), Rozner (F), Day (15), Sharma (15), Fleetwood (14)

Brian Harman sends a lovely second into 14, but the ball bites hard and nearly spins back off the front of the green. He nearly drains the putt from the fringe nevertheless, but par will do. Meanwhile par too for Tommy Fleetwood, who also nearly makes a long birdie putt, and betrays plenty of frustration as he taps in while huffing and puffing. Harman feels in complete control of this right now.

Step forward Sepp Straka! He arrows his approach at 14 from 163 yards to ten feet, then rattles in a confident putt. He joins the group in second spot.

-12: Harman (13)
-6: Rahm (F), Young (17), Straka (14)
-5: Hovland (F), Rozner (F), Day (14), Sharma (14), Fleetwood (13)
-4: A Fitzpatrick (F)

While Brian Harman continues to plough on forwards, it seems most of the chasing pack are either stalled or heading in the wrong direction. Tommy Fleetwood and Rory McIlroy we know about. Shubhankar Sharma is on a run of nine pars. And here’s Jason Day, putting up from the swale to the right-hand side of the 14th green. His ball doesn’t quite make it to the top of the slope, and topples all the way back down to his feet. He does extremely well to limit the damage by knocking his second attempt to four feet and tidying up from there, but he slips to -5.

Rory McIlroy only just gets his second over the OB dogleg, and though he wedges his third to ten feet, the birdie putt was never going in. That flat stick has done a complete number on him today. He started his round playing some sensational golf from tee to green, only for that work to be betrayed by his efforts on the green. No birdies after 5, and having stalled completely, he walks off with an extremely underwhelming 69. He’s -3 and his wait for major championship number five will click over into a second decade.

My mistake; Tommy Fleetwood didn’t end up in the bunker but down the bottom of a swale. He putts up to kick-in distance, which is a result from where he was. Par, but there’s another blow coming up, because Brian Harman walks in his birdie putt. What a time to post back-to-back birdies! He’s rediscovered his Friday self. He’s -12.

Harman finds the middle of the par-three 13th with ease. He’s earned himself the right to swing easy right now, and that’s exactly what he’s doing. It’s seriously impressive stuff, especially as the world would have been expecting a Bobby Clampett style implosion after those rickety opening four holes. Birdie chance from 15 feet coming up. But Fleetwood decides to push hard, and that’s what he does, into the bunker guarding the front-right of the green. If Tommy Lad isn’t careful, he’ll play himself out of this. He’s been extremely ragged since the turn, and in the face of Harman’s recent upsurge.

Brian Harman has long dispensed of those early nerves, and now he’s beginning to impose himself on this Open again. He screeches his approach at 12 to a halt four feet from the pin, and tidies up for a birdie that brings him into the red for his round today … and restores his cushion at the top to five strokes. Par for Tommy Fleetwood, who is beginning to show signs of frustration. See also Rory McIlroy, who misses a glorious birdie chance on 17 after screwing a fine tee shot to 12 feet, then nearly flays his drive at 18 out of bounds on the right. Inches away from disaster, but he’s OK. Just.

-11: Harman (12)
-6: Rahm (F), Young (16), Day (13)
-5: Hovland (F), Rozner (F), Sharma (13), Straka (13), Fleetwood (12)

Matthew Jordan, the Hoylake member who hit the opening tee shot on Thursday morning, continues to illustrate the benefit of local knowledge. Four birdies in the last five holes, the final one reward for a fantastic iron from 170 yards to four feet, and he’s signing for a 69. He’s -3 and well set for a shy at an unlikely win tomorrow.

Cameron Young already has three high finishes in the majors to his name. Last year’s runner-up at St Andrews, of course, but also a tie for third at last year’s PGA, and a top-ten finish at this year’s Masters. He’s still not won on the PGA Tour, but is surely due to break through sooner rather than later. Is this the week for the 26-year-old from New York state? Perhaps! A chip and a putt at the par-five 15th and he joins Jon Rahm and Jason Day in second spot at -6.

Jason Day and Shubhankar Sharma take turns to nearly drain monster birdie putts across 12. A 58-foot effort followed by a 40-foot one, both short by less than the width of a dimple. The small margins. They remain at -6 and -5 respectively. Pars meanwhile for Brian Harman and Tommy Fleetwood at 11. After all the earlier excitement, things have fallen a little flat at Hoylake. It ebbs and flows, ebbs and flows.

It’s back-to-back birdies for Sepp Straka, the latest at 11. The 30-year-old Austrian, who finished tied for seventh at the PGA a couple of months ago, and also has a top-ten finish at the Players to his name, joins the party at -5. Also -5, but coming in the other direction, is Tommy Fleetwood, who can’t get up and down from greenside sand at 10. Now both Brian Harman and Fleetwood are back where they began the day.

McIlroy’s early verve has long been lost. He cracks two big shots down the par-five 15th, then wedges to eight feet … but yet another birdie putt goes by the wayside. If that flat stick had been hot today, watch out record-book! But for the most part it’s been stone cold. He remains at -3. Meanwhile up on 18, Antoine Rozner is forced to kneel by the side of a greenside bunker and reach inside to punch out … and he does so gracefully to four feet! In goes the birdie putt and that’s a superb 67 from the unsung 30-year old Frenchman. He’s -5.

Three birdies in a row for the local hero Matthew Jordan at 14, 15 and 16! After a quiet day, the long-time Hoylake member rises quickly to -2. Sepp Straka drains a 40-footer on 10 for his first birdie of the round; after bogey on 4, he’s back to where he started at -4. And back down the hole, Tommy Fleetwood clacks his tee shot down the track, as the gallery continues with its satirical mashed-potato subversions: “T-Bone!” Isn’t that one already taken?

Gammy’s getting upset!

Brian Harman clips his tee shot at the par-three 9th to three feet. He rolls in the birdie putt, and he’s back where he started the day. Given the shaky way he played the first four holes, this is the sort of determined behaviour that wins Open Championships. Par for Tommy Fleetwood.

-10: Harman (9)
-6: Rahm (F), Day (10), Fleetwood (9)
-5: Hovland (F), Young (13), Sharma (10)
-4: A Fitzpatrick (F), Rozner (17), Grillo (11)
-3: Detry (F), Kim (F), Bland (17), N Hojgaard (17), McIlroy (14), Straka (9)

Jon Rahm speaks to Sky Sports. “I rolled a few more putts in … weather conditions were easier … I was aware it was going to be an important round in terms of the Open … to get lower than 65 was really fun … I have to compare it to the opening round [of 65] at Augusta, a different start but a similar feeling … it’s big, no matter what happens … I’ve done enough to give myself the best chance … it looks like the weather is going to get a little bit worse so we’ll see where I end up at the end of the day.”

A 68 for Tom Kim. Not bad for someone who went over on his ankle on Thursday, suffering a “grade one tear”. There’s always something going on with Tom, isn’t there. A natural-born star.

Jason Day sends his tee shot down the side of the par-three 9th. He’s short-sided with a wibbly-wobbly swale in between. No matter! He rattles a confident putt through the indentations and straight into the cup! Birdie, and he’s out in 32. Day came up one shot short of making the play-off at St Andrews in 2015; he looks in the mood to right that wrong this week.

-9: Harman (7)
-6: Rahm (F), Day (9), Fleetwood (7)
-5: Hovland (F), Young (11), Sharma (9)
-4: A Fitzpatrick (F), Rozner (16)
-3: Detry (F), Kim (17), Bland (17), N Hojgaard (16), McIlroy (13), Grillo (10), Straka (8)

Viktor Hovland shoots 66!

Viktor Hovland’s approach to the 18th digs in, instead of rolling close, but no matter! He rolls in the 20-foot birdie effort that remains for his sixth birdie of the day! Just the one dropped shot, at 2, and he ends the day at -5. He’d need quite a few things to fall his way, and for Brian Harman to collapse, but as things stand, going out in the last match on Sunday for the second Open in a row is still a live possibility for the 25-year-old Norwegian!

Rory nearly bounces straight back on 13. He’s this close to draining a 40-footer across the green for birdie, but par will have to suffice. He remains -3. Cameron Young yips a short birdie effort on 11; he stays at -5. And up on 15, Antoine Rozner holes out from 30 yards for an eagle that whisks him up the standings to -4.

You may be wondering why there’s been no mention of the penultimate group of Min Woo Lee and Sepp Straka. That’s because they’re dragging each other down. Not a birdie between them. Straka has bogeyed 4 to drop to -3; Lee has shed shots at 1, 4 and 6 to tumble to level par. Best look away, for now at least.

The rain is still coming down. There’s no wind, though. Certainly not in Rory McIlroy’s sail; he can’t make his par putt on 12, which is always drifting left, and he trudges off in a funk. He drops to -3.

Brian Harman and Tommy Fleetwood take turns to go close, but no cigar, at the 6th. They remain at -9 and -6 respectively. Meanwhile up on 12, Rory McIlroy drives into deep filth down the left, then sends his second down a swale to the right of the green. He chips up, but in uncharacteristically unconvincing fashion, and he’ll be left with a 20-footer to save his par.

Five birdies in the last eight holes for Thomas Detry. It would have been six, had his ball not stopped half-a-dimple short on the edge of the 18th hole. He inspects the ball from all angles, but it’s not going to drop, and eventually he admits defeat and taps in the shortest shot. Back in 32 for a 67 and the 30-year-old Belgian, who has very little of note on his CV apart from a play-off berth at the 2021 Scottish Open, is currently tied for tenth at -3.

Back-to-back birdies for Cameron Young at 8 and 9. Last year’s runner-up fancies some more business-end action. He’s -5. Meanwhile the wits of Hoylake have entertained all week as they subvert the US mashed-potato trope. “Chips and gravy” is the latest gambit as Tommy Fleetwood fires into the heart of 6.

A quite brilliant eagle attempt by Brian Harman from 70 feet away at 5. The ball only just dies to the right at the last. What a boost that would have been! As it is, that’s a fine birdie that repairs some of the early damage and will de-jangle a few nerve endings. Meanwhile a disappointing six-foot miss for Tommy Fleetwood, and the momentum shifts again. Not for the last time, I’ll be bound.

-9: Harman (5)
-6: Rahm (F), Fleetwood (5)

The rain’s toppling down now. Brian Harman could be forgiven for slipping into Metaphor Mode, but instead he crashes a drive down the middle of the par-five 5th, then finds the back-edge of the green with a glorious second. Two putts for birdie would be quite the tonic, though from 70 feet nothing’s certain. Still, that’s a decent reaction to another bogey-infused disappointment.

On 5, Jason Day rakes in a long putt for birdie … while his partner Shubhankar Sharma rattles in an eagle putt from similar distance! They both jump to -5. Viktor Hovland isn’t too far away from eagle at 15, but he’s happy enough to tap in for par. Rory gets up and down from the bottom of the swale at 10, without breaking sweat. He’s in the mood. And back on 4, Brian Harman can’t make his par saver. This is really opening up now.

-8: Harman (4)
-6: Rahm (F), Fleetwood (4)
-5: Day (5), Sharma (5)
-4: A Fitzpatrick (F), Hovland (15), McIlroy (10), Young (8)

Harman plays the percentages. He certainly doesn’t want the ball coming back down the slope towards his feet. So he gives the chip a little extra oomph, and it rolls 12 feet past. But at least this way he’s guaranteed a putt for par. Meanwhile on 10, there’ll be no birdie putt for Rory this time, as his second into the monster par-four 10th hits the bank at the front of the green and kicks left.

Rory can’t make his birdie putt. He’s had an opportunity on every single hole so far! He’s three for nine. Not sure how to process this, because his play tee to green is outrageously good. But he’s still turning in 32, so it’s hard to criticise. He could be just four strokes off the lead soon, too, because back on 4, Brian Harman sends a hot approach out of the rough and over the back of the green. He’ll have to get up and down from the bottom of a swale, with not too much green to play with up top. Big moment coming up.

Brian Harman lags a long putt on 3 to kick-in distance. He scrambles his par. But he’s still not looking totally comfortable, cutting a completely different figure to the man who insouciantly strolled around the joint yesterday en route to that glorious 65. He sends his tee shot at 4 into the thick stuff down the left.

Alex Fitzpatrick posts 65!

Matt’s younger brother pours a 15-foot birdie putt straight into the cup on 18, and his eyes sparkle with delight! Out in 32, back in 33, with three birdies in the closing four holes! His look of glee is an absolute balm for the soul. What an Open debut the 24-year-old is having! He’s back in the house at -4. Now that’s moving.

Rory McIlroy misses another birdie putt, this time on 8, though it wasn’t exactly the easiest read. He looks pained nevertheless. But he doesn’t let it affect him too much, and he sets up yet another chance on the par-three 9th, landing his tee shot 18 feet from the flag.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *