Major winners make big moves

With little breeze and attack-ready pin positions, some of the game’s premier talents seemingly arrived at Aronimink with a spring in their step.

And, teeing off nearly four hours before the final group, Northern Ireland’s McIlroy seized an opportunity to give the later starters something to ponder.

Starting at one over – five back of overnight leaders Smalley and Maverick McNealy – the back-to-back Masters champion hauled himself into a share of the lead at four under.

He stated his plan had been to get to five under “to make the leaders shoot under par to be ahead of me”.

While he stumbled over the closing holes with a bogey at the 17th, he still has a realistic shot at becoming only the sixth man to win the first two majors of the year.

Having been outside the top 100 after Thursday’s opening round, a McIlroy win would mark the greatest major championship comeback after 18 holes.

Steve Jones, who won the 1996 US Open after being tied 84th at the end of the first round, currently holds that record.

Two of McIlroy’s Ryder Cup team-mates also entered the fray. Thirteen years removed from his US Open win at Merion – just six miles from Aronimink – Rose has suffered recent heartache in majors.

He lost last year’s Masters in a play-off to McIlroy and led this year’s tournament with nine holes to play before faltering down the stretch.

However, in his lowest round with his new McLaren irons, the 45-year-old carded six birdies and a bogey to sit four back.

Rahm is another European star chasing redemption. The Spaniard has not added to his two majors since joining LIV Golf before the 2024 season and chased down Scheffler at Quail Hollow last year before imploding over the final holes.

The 31-year-old – hoping to become Spain’s first US PGA winner – missed a four-footer to drop a shot on the final hole but will still be widely regarded as the man to beat.

“As hard as it is to play, the challenge can also be kind of fun if you do well,” he stated.

“That’s probably the reason why the leaderboard is so bunched up and it’s going to be such a good Sunday.”

Figure caption,

Watch: Rory McIlroy ‘proud’ after 66 boosts US PGA bid

Smalley looks to emulate ‘Wild Thing’

John Daly with the US PGA Championship trophyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Smalley and Schmid are hoping to emulate John Daly, the last player to win the US PGA without having won a PGA Tour event beforehand in 1991

Remarkably, the man they are all chasing is without a professional victory. In fact, it is the first time Smalley has held a 54-hole lead in 141 starts on the PGA Tour.

And while the pressure-cooker atmosphere of championship Sunday may prove different, the 29-year-old belied his inexperience at this level, recovering from three bogeys in his opening four holes to emerge from the pack.

With the top players attracting the crowds up ahead, Smalley was barely on the radar when he reached the turn with a two-over 37 to sit two under overall.

But birdies at 10, 13, 15 and 16 catapulted him back into the spotlight, and while he bogeyed 17, he drained a 13-footer for birdie on the last to open up a two-shot cushion.

Smalley led the way for the unheralded bunch.

On Sunday, he will play in the final group alongside Germany’s Mathias Schmid, another player chasing his first professional win on one of golf’s grandest stages after an excellent 65.

That was matched by Nick Taylor. The Canadian has never posted a top-20 finish in a major, but he knows how to perform on a big stage. He was five PGA Tour victories and memorably holed a 72-foot putt to beat Tommy Fleetwood in a play-off to clinch his national open in 2023.

Another man to beat Fleetwood in a play-off is Rai. The 31-year-old has done it twice, in fact, in Scotland and Abu Dhabi. And if there are extra holes at Aronimink on Sunday, he showed enough poise and precision during the third round to suggest he can become the first Englishman since Jim Barnes in 1919 to lift the Wanamaker Trophy.

Like Rahm, Rai reached five under with a birdie at 11 and parred his next six holes before, like many, succumbing to the 18th.

“It’s actually the first that I heard of that statistic a few minutes ago. I didn’t realise that that was the case,” Rai stated when England’s US PGA drought was put to him post-round.

“Yeah, amazing, amazing to be in this position. I’m trying my best to really stick in there and take what comes.”

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