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2026 Players Championship leaderboard: Live updates, scores, analysis and highlights from Round 3 - CBS Sports
Åberg holds a three-shot lead on the field after 54 holes, but there are a bevy of talented golfers near the top of the leaderboard who could play spoiler on Sunday
Saturday at the 2026 Players Championship saw the leaderboard compress and then expand as those golfers out in front at the halfway point backtracked on the front nine while some in chasing mode made the most of their Moving Days. Despite seeing his lead trimmed to as little as one, the 36-hole leader remained the 54-hole leader as Ludvig Åberg increased his advantage to three strokes entering Sunday's final round.
The Swedish superstar stumbled in the initial stretch of his third round but found his groove around the turn and never looked back. Åberg played his final 10 holes in 2 under to put a bow on a 1-under 71 that put him at 13 under for the championship and three shots clear of Michael Thorbjornsen.
Åberg aims to become the first player since Rory McIlroy in 2019 to lead at the 36-hole mark at the Players Championship and go on to win. He entered this week 1 of 5 attempting to convert 36-hole leads into victories, his lone situational win coming at the 2023 RSM Classic.
One day after shooting the third-lowest score in competition at TPC Sawgrass, Aberg struggled out of the gate. He put a bogey on his scorecard on No. 4 thanks to a 7-foot conversion on the greens and looked out of sorts until a par save from 14 feet on No. 5 knocked him back on track.
From there, Åberg was just about flawless. A birdie on the par-5 9th allowed him to turn in even par and extended his lead to three strokes. Two holes later, he dropped a 5 iron from 240 yards to 17 feet and dropped a roar for the rest of the field to hear when his eagle bid found the bottom of the cup.
With playing partner Xander Schauffele struggling and those out in front unable to maintain their charging efforts, the 26-year-old zipped into the left lane and past them all. He made tidy pars on Nos. 14-15, and although he did not take advantage of the par-5 16th, that was about all he did wrong in the final two hours of his third round before the 18th green.
A three-putt bogey on the last hole -- which presented problems for the likes of Cameron Young, Brian Harman and Matt Fitzpatrick -- brought the robotic right-hander back to the field ever so slightly and confirmed his overnight lead would be three.
On a golf course that has trickled and baffled the best in the world, Åberg has put just three bogeys on his scorecard through 54 holes. He has gotten the job the conventional way and played the par 5s in 11-under fashion to put space between himself and the rest of the field.
However, while the manner in which he is getting the job done is the manner in which one should attack TPC Sawgrass, the visual of his effort has been something to watch. Towering drives, high iron shots landing with a softness that has been unmatched and a supportive short-game effort, Åberg has shown he is the complete package up to this point.
Who can catch Åberg on Sunday?
2. Michael Thorbjornsen (-10): Don't tell this first timer that experience is required around TPC Sawgrass. Thorbjornsen hit the center of the club face time and again on Saturday en route to his 67, which was one of the lowest rounds of the day despite going off in the afternoon. While he has yet to win on the PGA Tour, the powerful righty has recent experience in contention at the WM Phoenix Open, where he held the lead with three holes to play. He has played the par 5s in 6 under the last two rounds after opening with a 74.
"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." Odds: 17/2
3. Cameron Young (-9): A weapon like the driver will always give him a chance, and the way he is striking putts invokes confidence. His wedge play was subpar for most of his third round, but he threw a dart into the island green for a kick-in birdie in what could perhaps serve as a lynchpin with those clubs on Sunday. It would have been nice if he had not hit his tee shot in the water on the last and carded a double bogey, but there are only two players in front of him on this leaderboard with 18 holes to play. Odds: 9-1
T4. Xander Schauffele (-8): It was not pretty from Schauffele on Saturday, but he is not completely out of this tournament. His wedge play was abysmal as those clubs led to all three of his bogeys and squandered scoring chances on holes like the par-5 2nd and par-4 12th. Schauffele was one of two players inside the top 25 on the leaderboard to post an over-par score in Round 3, but if he cleans up the wedge play, he could flip the script on Sunday. Od...