The Day

World No. 1 Scheffler has lead alone going into final round at Colonial

- By STEPHEN HAWKINS

— Scottie Scheffler almost made it through another round at Colonial without a bogey, this time with wind gusting through the trees at Hogan's Alley. The world's top-ranked player has the lead alone after the third round.

Scheffler, whose only bogey at Colonial so far this week came at No. 17 on Saturday, shot a 2-under 68 with wind gusts of around 30 mph and temperatur­es in the upper-90s. His 11-under total was two strokes ahead of Brendon Todd, whose third-round 65 was bogey-free, and Scott Stallings (70).

“I mean, I was playing good golf. It was really tough out there,” Scheffler said. “The winds were up really high. The greens were actually pretty firm, and so it was challengin­g.”

Consecutiv­e birdies to start the back nine gave Scheffler a two-stroke lead.

He had a 20-foot chip-in from the left edge of the green at No. 10, then hit a 357-yard drive and 250-yard approach at the 621-yard 11th before pitching to 6 inches.

Scheffler's bogey was a threeputt from 37 feet at No. 17, where his 5-foot par chance slid just left of the cup. He got that stroke back with a 31-foot birdie on his final putt of the day.

“I was glad it was going toward the cup. I hit it a little bit too firm. I struggled a little bit with the speed of the greens today. It's tough when the wind gets blowing that hard,” he said. “Like 18, I'm putting downhill but straight into the wind, and depending on what kind of gust I get, it's going to move that ball around on the green a lot.”

The only bogey-free round other than Todd was a 68 by Harold Varner III, who was alone in fourth place at 8 under.

“I didn't know it was bogey-free,” Varner said afterward. “But when the wind is up like that, you just want to hang in there, and I thought I did a really good job of that for sure.”

After Scheffler missed the cut last week at the PGA Championsh­ip, his first cut since his season debut in October, the Masters champion goes into Sunday's final round with a chance for his fifth career PGA Tour victory — all in a span of 10 starts since mid-February.

More gusty wind and high temperatur­es are in the forecast for Sunday

The last PGA Tour player with five wins in a season before the start of June was Tom Watson in 1980.

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