Mark Lamport-Stokes
 |  Field Level Media

Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. — Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg, in pursuit of a third PGA Tour title and the biggest victory of his career, maintained ice-cool composure as he increased his overnight lead to three shots in the third round of The Players Championship on Saturday.

The 26-year-old, whose most recent victory came at last year’s Genesis Invitational, for the most part played ultra-disciplined golf as he carded a 1-under-par 71 on another sun-splashed afternoon at TPC Sawgrass.

Aberg’s most frustrating moment of the day came at the par-4 18th where he surprisingly ran up a bogey after three-putting from 25 feet, this following a missed birdie opportunity from just 8 feet at the iconic par-3 17th.

“I definitely would have loved to come out of 16, 17 with at least one birdie, and the 3-putt on 18 kind of stings, annoys me a little bit,” the Swede said after finishing with a 13-under total of 203 in the PGA Tour’s flagship event.

“But overall, I started the day with a two-shot lead and ended with a three, so that’s a positive for sure. But Sawgrass tomorrow is going to be a challenge. It’s all about executing, and you’re going to get punished if you don’t, which is a fun way to play golf.”

Aberg will head into Sunday’s final round three strokes in front of American Michael Thorbjornsen, a former college friend and fellow resident in the Jacksonville area who reeled off five birdies, an eagle and two bogeys en route to a 67.

Cameron Young was alone in third at 9-under after recording a 72 while fellow Americans Brian Harman (69), Xander Schauffele (74) and Justin Thomas (72), England’s Matt Fitzpatrick (69), Viktor Hovland of Norway (69) and Canada’s Corey Conners (72) were a stroke further back in a six-way tie for fourth.

Ponte Vedra Beach resident Aberg had been two ahead overnight and made a slow start to the round, bogeying the par-4 fourth after finding the right rough off the tee and doing well to save par at the fifth where he sank a 13-foot putt after being bunkered off the tee.

Three more pars followed before he got up and down from a greenside bunker to birdie the par-5 ninth and stretch his lead to three shots.

Though a Young birdie briefly trimmed Aberg’s advantage to two, the Swede surged four ahead with a superb eagle at the par-5 11th where he struck his second shot to 17 feet and coolly sank the putt. On a course that was increasingly running firm, the Swede comfortably parred the next six holes before ending his day on a bitter note with a bogey at the last.

“Overall, I’m pleased with the way I was playing today in a tough condition,” said Aberg, whose best PGA Tour finish this season was a tie for third at last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational. “This is definitely the biggest individual tournament on the PGA Tour, non-major, so it will be a cool experience tomorrow to go out with a lead, which I’ve never done before. … I’m going to try to soak it in, enjoy it, but at the end of the day, trying to hit as few golf shots as I possibly can.”

For much of the day, Young was Aberg’s closest challenger. The 28-year-old rebounded from a bogey at the third with birdies at the sixth, 11th and 13th. Though he dropped another shot at the 14th, he also birdied the 17th, where he very nearly aced the hole. However, he was left to rue a double-bogey at the 18th where his tee shot sailed left into the water hazard.

“I feel like I battled pretty well,” said Young, whose only PGA Tour victory came at the 2025 Wyndham Championship. “I didn’t play great. Been driving it really well, and today I just didn’t get it in the fairways much.

“To get it back to 2-under with one hole to go, I feel like was pretty good. Honestly, the tee shot (on 18) wasn’t bad. I almost bent over to pick up the tee when I hit it. There’s a bunch of wind up there, and it just kept turning and turning and was a foot too much.”

Former Stanford University student Thorbjornsen, who played a lot of college golf with Aberg when the Swede represented Texas Tech, is relishing the prospect of them playing together in Sunday’s final pairing.

“I love playing golf with him,” said Thorbjornsen, a 24-year-old who is seeking his first PGA Tour win. “He was one of the guys in college that I looked up to, even though he’s only one year older than me. Very solid, very solid player. His mental game is extremely good as well. I’m really looking forward to it … and pretty cool that two hometown guys are in the final group!”

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who made his 70th consecutive PGA Tour cut on Friday with just one shot to spare, produced his best performance of the week as he carded a flawless 5-under 67 that included three birdies in his first six holes.

“I was a little sharper today than I was the first two days,” said the four- time major winner after finishing the round tied for 26th, nine strokes off the lead at 4 under. “I felt like I was swinging it better each day of the tournament. Today hit a few more fairways and was able to give myself a few more looks for birdie.”

World No. 2 and defending champion Rory McIlroy, who withdrew from last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational after two rounds due to a back injury, struggled at times with his driver and his putter en route to a 72 and a 1-over total, tied for 57th.

Winner of The Players Championship in 2019 and again last year, the Northern Irishman twice found water off the tee and he failed to take advantage of a couple of makeable birdie putts at the seventh and eighth before missing a 4-footer for par at the ninth.

LIV

Defending champion Joaquin Niemann shot a 66 to surge into a third-round tie for the lead at LIV Golf Singapore.

The Chilean mixed seven birdies and two bogeys to tie Lee Westwood of England atop the leaderboard at 10-under-par 203 for the tournament, one stroke ahead of second-round leader Bryson DeChambeau and Richard Lee of Canada.

Westwood made birdies on three of the final four holes to finish with a 68 at the Sentosa Golf Club, which played tougher than it did in the first two rounds.

“I would say it’s a major championship-style golf course. It’s very demanding,” Westwood said. “Even though the rough isn’t that thick, it asks you to hit a lot of fairways, and it’s difficult to score from the rough. You don’t have as much control on the golf ball.”

Niemann agreed about the challenge the course presents.

“I’ve been hitting the ball really good. I think that’s the key,” Niemann said. “It’s a really stressful golf course, I’ll say. There’s a lot of danger off the tee, a lot of water on second shots. One way or the other, I feel like I’ve been kind of like stress-free after I hit the shot. Once I get on the tee, there’s some pressure there, and then once I hit the ball, it goes right where I’m seeing with my eyes, so it feels satisfying.”

DeChambeau followed his second-round 65 with a one-over 72, but he wasn’t dismayed despite bogeys at holes 8, 10 and 12.

“I played really well. The greens on 8, 9, 10, 11 got really slow,” he said. “For some reason, there wasn’t as much wind around there and I guess the greens got slower in that area and I three-putted a few of them and that cost me some momentum. Other than that, I played great golf. I almost played just as good as yesterday, just things didn’t line up.”

Lee, a LIV Golf wild card, birdied the final hole to record a 69 and tie DeChambeau.

Spain’s Jon Rahm shot an even-par 71 to stay within striking distance of the leaders, three strokes off the pace. Marc Leishman of Australia (71) stands alone in sixth place at 6-under par.

In the team competition, 4Aces are atop the leaderboard. Captain Dustin Johnson’s round of 68 sent the team to 16-under, two shots ahead of Ripper GC and Legion XIII, and put Johnson in a tie for seventh place with six others at 5-under.

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