Wyndham Clark leads by six at Shinnecock. George Walker IV/AP / Alamy Stock Photo

Clark takes six-shot lead into US Open final round – but still has Scheffler in his rearview mirror

Rory McIlroy is now 10 shots adrift after a back-nine collapse on Saturday.

RORY MCILROY’S BID for a first US Open title since 2011 collapsed on the back nine as leader Wyndham Clark took a commanding six-shot lead into Sunday’s final round.

Clark, the 2023 US Open champion, sank a four-foot eagle putt at the par-five 16th on the way to firing a level-par 70 at windy Shinnecock to stand on seven-under 203 after 54 holes.

Despite a three-putt bogey at 18, Clark boosted his lead by two strokes from his 36-hole margin.

“It was a tale of two people,” Clark said. “I’d hit great shots and then I’d hit one of the worst shots and make dumb mistakes. Then I’d recover and make great putts or chips.

“The fact I increased my lead is a huge thing, so overall satisfied.”

McIlroy’s round exploded to life with three successive birdies from the fifth, moving him to within four of Clark, who was just teeing off.

But the Masters champion overshot the green at the difficult 10th for the second successive day for the first of five bogeys on an inward nine of 40 and a round of 73 which left him three over and his hopes in tatters.

The only golfer to lose a major with a lead of six or more entering the final round was Greg Norman at the 1996 Masters.

Scheffler, who would complete a career Grand Slam with a victory Sunday on his 30th birthday, fired a 69 — one of just two sub-par rounds on the day — to claim a share of second on one-under 209.

Scheffler opened with two bogeys for only the fourth time in 105 major rounds, but birdied four of his first seven holes on the back nine before a bogey at the par-three 17th and a closing par.

“We’ve been battling hard for a few days and I did a good job of keeping myself in the tournament,” Scheffler said. “I’ll need a really nice round tomorrow if I’m going to try and catch Wyndham.”

Not since Lee Janzen in 1998 has a US Open winner been more than four strokes off the lead after 54 holes.

Joining Scheffler on 209 were fellow Americans Sam Stevens and Sahith Theegala, whose tap-in at 18 was his lone birdie of the day, plus South Korean Tom Kim, who shot 72 after bogeys on three of his first six holes.

“This was one of the biggest tests of patience I’ve ever had in a single round in my life,” Theegala said. “It was a grind.”

Whipping winds added to Shinnecock’s challenge, combining with dense rough and tricky pin positions to test the world’s top golfers.

Players are chasing a record $4.5 million top prize from a purse matching the highest in major golf at $22.5 million.

Clark opened with a three-putt bogey, tapped in for birdie at the par-five fifth but made bogey at eight. He sank a five-foot birdie putt at 14 only to bogey 15 on a four-foot putt miss, then answered with a four-foot eagle putt at the par-five 16th.

Clark, 32, is coming off a PGA Tour triumph four weeks ago in Texas and looking to wipe away the memory of his locker-smashing outburst after he missed the US Open cut at Oakmont last year. 

After his bogey-bogey start, Scheffler birdied the 10th from just inside eight feet.

Scheffler birdied three consecutive holes, his longest run in a US Open, starting with a 65-foot birdie chip at 14 that prompted a fist pump.

“At that point over par for the tournament, you can feel like it’s slipping away,” Scheffler said. “To steal one there was really nice.”

Scheffler followed with a 12-foot birdie putt at 15 and a tap-in birdie at the par-five 16th.

“It has been a battle all week,” Scheffler said. “Got off to a slow start. It was nice to steal a few on the back nine. I’ve been fighting to stay in it all week.”

– © AFP 2026

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