Key events
Harris English was one of the form horses in the majors last year. Second place at the Open, a tie for second in this Championship, both behind Scottie Scheffler, both admittedly a fair distance back. But second place is second place, and you can throw in a tie for 12th at the Masters as well. This year he tied for 30th at Augusta, and he’s keeping this pleasing trend going here. Early birdies at 2 and 3, and now on 6 he sends his drive down the left of the fairway, allowing him the opportunity of attacking a pin tucked away on the right. Which he does, stroking an iron to five feet. It’s something of a disappointment when he then misses the putt, and yes I did start writing this entry in full expectation of his making it, and joining the group in second place. As is, he tidies up for par and remains at -3. But it’s nevertheless still a fine start from the 36-year-old from Georgia.
Scottie Scheffler hasn’t had the start he wanted. The world number one started the day at -1, in a tie for 23rd, and no player has ever won a major from outside the top 20 after 54 holes. A flyer out of the blocks was almost essential, and birdie at 2 helped his cause, but his tee shot at the par-three 5th toppled into the fringe at the back of the green, and he hit a slightly hot chip coming back out. The ball rolled ten feet past, and he couldn’t make the par saver coming back. He’s now level for his round through 6, still at -1 with a third of his round – and two-thirds of the theoretically easier nine – gone.
… so this is where Kitayama currently sits on the current leaderboard. A fine morning’s shift.
-6: Smalley
-4: Rai, Åberg, Taylor, Rahm, Schmid
-3: Kitayama (F), English (4), Lindberg (2), Matsuyama (2), Reed, McNealy, McIlroy, Schauffele
-2: M Fitzpatrick (16), Thomas (10), Hillier (8), Gotterup (2), Lee (1), Greyserman (1), Griffin, Smith, Kaymer, Cauley, Rose, Niemann, Reitan, Kirk
-1: Young (9), Harrington (7), Scheffler (5), Puig (5), Fowler (5), Burns (3), Harman (2)
Kitayama shoots 63
It was once the holy grail in the majors. Now it’s one off the men’s record of 62. But it’s still quite the feat, even if Aronimink is only a par 70. Kurt Kitayama went out in 30 this morning, illustrating the aforementioned benefit of an early start in calm conditions, then came back in 33, a birdie at the last the final flourish. Finishing his week at -4, it’s probably not going to be enough to better his PGA Championship best, a tie for fourth in 2023, but it’s been a great week for the 33-year-old Californian, who has an outside chance of finishing in the top ten at a major for only the second time. How he’ll rue yesterday’s collapse around the turn: a run of 7-5-5-6 between holes 9 and 12 that cost him six strokes. The ifs and buts of a major championship.
Let’s start with the weather report. It’s going to be the warmest day of the week, so expect the course to get firmer and faster as the day goes on. Given the contours and kinks of the fairways and greens, that’ll be a double-edged sword. The wind has been pretty benign so far today, but it’s expected to get up as we progress, so the earlier starters have had an advantage. All in all, similar to yesterday, when scoring became progressively harder. Goodness knows how this is likely to pan out as a result, but if someone breaks from the pack and posts a score mid-afternoon, things could get interesting for the final pairings.
Preamble
At the risk of becoming a hostage to fortune, there’s a fair chance this is going to end in a play-off, isn’t there. So with 47 players starting the day within seven shots of the lead – and the record comeback from a 54-hole deficit by a winner at the PGA Championship is seven – let’s not concern ourselves too much with the possible outcomes, narratives and permutations. Instead, let’s just go with the flow. Here’s how the top of the leaderboard looked after 54 holes …
-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
… and this is when everyone has gone / will go out. All times BST. It’s on!
1240 Casey Jarvis, Brian Campbell
1249 Luke Donald, Ben Kern
1258 Collin Morikawa, Elvis Smylie
1307 Kurt Kitayama, Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen
1316 Ryan Gerard, Jason Day
1325 Alex Fitzpatrick, Matt Wallace
1334 Rasmus Hojgaard, Sami Valimaki
1343 Shane Lowry, John Parry
1352 Christiaan Bezuidenhout, William Mouw
1401 Patrick Cantlay, Alex Noren
1410 Corey Conners, Ryo Hisatsune
1419 Matt Fitzpatrick, Sahith Theegala
1428 Keith Mitchell, Sam Stevens
1437 Daniel Berger, Daniel Brown
1446 Michael Brennan, Johnny Keefer
1455 Ryan Fox, Jhonattan Vegas
1515 Denny McCarthy, Chandler Blanchet
1525 Haotong Li, Kazuki Higa
1535 Jordan Spieth, Rico Hoey
1545 Stephan Jaeger, Taylor Pendrith
1555 Justin Thomas, Aldrich Potgieter
1605 Si Woo Kim, Cameron Young
1615 Andrew Putnam, Andrew Novak
1625 Dustin Johnson, Daniel Hillier
1635 Padraig Harrington, Tom Hoge
1645 Nicolai Hojgaard, Michael Kim
1705 Scottie Scheffler, David Puig
1715 Rickie Fowler, Harris English
1725 Sam Burns, Brooks Koepka
1735 Brian Harman, Mikael Lindberg
1745 Hideki Matsuyama, Chris Gotterup
1755 Min Woo Lee, Max Greyserman
1805 Ben Griffin, Cameron Smith
1815 Martin Kaymer, Bud Cauley
1825 Justin Rose, Joaquin Niemann
1835 Kristoffer Reitan, Chris Kirk
1855 Patrick Reed, Maverick McNealy
1905 Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele
1915 Aaron Rai, Ludvig Aberg
1925 Nick Taylor, Jon Rahm
1935 Alex Smalley, Matti Schmid

