HomeUSLudvig Aberg Surges Ahead with 3-Shot Advantage at The Players Championship

Ludvig Aberg Surges Ahead with 3-Shot Advantage at The Players Championship

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At Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Ludvig Aberg delivered a stellar performance at The Players Championship, capping off his third eagle of the week with a disciplined round of 1-under 71. This effort secured the 26-year-old Swede a commanding three-shot advantage as he heads into the final day at TPC Sawgrass.

Aberg found himself with opportunities to widen the gap between him and his competitors. On the par-5 16th, he stood in the fairway with a 7-iron, ready to attack the green from 193 yards out. At the island-green 17th, he faced an 8-foot birdie putt aimed at a front pin. Finally, he had a 25-foot birdie putt on the final hole.

Ultimately, he navigated these holes at 1 over par, resulting in two pars and a three-putt bogey on the last hole. This served as a reminder of the challenges that lie ahead on this perilous Stadium Course, with the final round still looming.

Reflecting on his round, Aberg expressed some frustration, saying he wished he had converted at least one birdie and acknowledged that the three-putt was bothersome. “However, I began with a two-shot lead and ended with a three-shot lead, so that’s a positive takeaway,” he remarked.

“But I started with a two-shot lead and I ended with a three-shot lead, so that’s a positive,” he said.

Aberg was at 13-under 203 and will be in the final group with Michael Thorbjornsen, who also lives in the area and is at the TPC Sawgrass when he’s not on tour. They are friends who play often, just as they did as two of the most elite players in college. Both were No. 1 in the PGA Tour University ranking to earn PGA Tour cards.

Thorbjornsen made up ground with a 67 to land in the final group as he tries to become only the third player — and first since Craig Perks in 2002 — to win The Players in his first try.

“I don’t think I have to change too much, especially on courses like this,” Thorbjornsen said. “I think if you play some really steady golf you’ll run into some birdies. Does anyone have a bogey-free round either yesterday or today? I’m not too sure, but there aren’t many. So I think slow and steady wins the race, and we’re just going to play some solid golf.”

Cameron Young was Aberg’s biggest threat on the back nine, holing a 45-foot birdie putt on the par-3 13th and getting away with a wedge he hit a little heavy on the par-3 17th. It settled inside 2 feet away, the closest shot of the day.

“I was trying to land it 133 and I fatted it just a little bit and it went to a foot,” he said.

Two shots behind going to the 18th, the closing hole ate him up. Young tugged his drive just enough that it barely found the water down the left side. He pushed his third shot into the nasty, rough-covered moguls and chipped through the firm, fast green into a bunker. But he holed an 8-foot putt for double bogey and escaped with a 72 to leave him four shots behind.

Big blunders cost so many others.

Justin Thomas, looking strong in his second tournament back from lower back surgery in November, went from the water to the rough and then over the green in making a triple bogey on the sixth hole. His tee shot on the reachable par-4 12th found the water. But he kept it together, had a pair of birdies later and salvaged a 72.

Thomas was at 8-under 208, five shots behind along with Matt Fitzpatrick (69), Brian Harman (69), Viktor Hovland (69), Corey Conners (72) and Xander Schauffele (74). Schauffele was in the final group and managed only one birdie while hitting just eight greens.

Young is at The Players for the fourth time and has never cracked the top 50, and yet his optimism was running high even after a double bogey to finish.

“I cost myself two off the tee and I saved myself one with the putter,” he said of the 8-footer he made. “So it could have been worse. I drew a terrible lie right of the green, somewhere that it feels like you should have a decent chance to get up-and-down. Saved myself one with the putter is what I’m going to take away from it.”

That he felt he was still in the game said more about the give-and-take nature of the TPC Sawgrass than Aberg and his uber efficient swing that saw him play a Ryder Cup just four months after he got out of college in 2023.

Aberg shot a 63 in the second round to take the lead. Thomas shot a 62 last year. The best score Saturday was a 65 by Robert MacIntyre.

“Those number are out there, and no reason why I can’t be the one to shoot them,” Young said.

And so the final group is a pair of locals — one from Sweden by way of Texas Tech, the other from just outside Boston by way of Stanford. Neither plays the Stadium Course all that much because it’s rarely in the condition seen at The Players.

But they know their way around, just not with so much at stake.

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