The Latest: Stenson leads Lefty heading to final Open round

The Latest: Stenson leads Lefty heading to final Open round

Updated Mar. 4, 2020 1:43 p.m. ET

TROON, Scotland (AP) The latest from the British Open (all times local):

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7:25 p.m.

Henrik Stenson will take a one-stroke lead to the final day of the British Open.

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After a riveting duel with Phil Mickelson in the last group of the third round, Stenson finished with a 3-under 68 that leaves him with a 12-under 201 total at Royal Troon on Saturday.

Mickelson gave up the lead he held after the first two rounds. A couple of bogeys on the inward nine left him with a 70 on a cool, blustery day.

That leaves Stenson leading a major all by himself for the first time. And he's never been out front going to the final round, giving him his best shot yet at becoming the first male golfer from Sweden to capture a major championship.

The 46-year-old Mickelson is right in the mix for his sixth major title. And he could become the second-oldest winner in Open history, surpassed only by Old Tom Morris in 1867.

It looks like a two-man race. Bill Haas is the closest challenger, six shots off the lead.

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6:35 p.m.

Where's the beef?

Check out the leaderboard at the British Open.

Andrew Johnston, a burly, bearded Englishman who's been a big fan favorite at Royal Troon, shot a 1-under 70 on Saturday to pull within six shots of the leaders. The 27-year-old Johnston, whose nickname is ''Beef,'' is at 5-under 208 through three rounds, breaking par in all of them.

Johnston is quite a character. He made his first trip to America for last month's U.S. Open, and then did a piece for the Golf Channel where he downed a 32-ounce steak in the blink of an eye during the Bridgestone.

Another big meal might be in order after the way Beef is playing this week.

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5:55 p.m.

The British Open ambitions of Dustin Johnson and Rickie Fowler were derailed at ''The Railway'' hole.

Johnson moved to 5 under par and was in sight of Phil Mickelson and Henrik Stenson when he took a 7 on the 11th hole, which runs alongside a railway line.

It was even worse for Fowler. He hit back-to-back shots from the fairway over the wall that lines the right side of the hole, and onto the rocks next to the rail track. Fowler took an 8 to drop to 1 over, and shot 76 for a 4-over 217 total.

The 11th ranks as the hardest hole so far on Saturday. It was on Thursday, too.

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5:25 p.m.

Phil Mickelson makes the turn at the British Open still holding a one-stroke lead.

Lefty is turning in another consistent performance in the windy conditions along the Irish Sea, rolling in a short birdie putt at No. 3 and making par at every other hole on the outward nine.

Now, the tough part begins. The inward nine has been especially brutal playing into gusts up to 20 mph (35 kph), so Mickelson will be going into a bit of survival mode the rest of the round.

Playing in the final group with Mickelson, Henrik Stenson briefly grabbed the lead with birdies on three of the first four holes. But a couple of bogeys knocked the Swede back before the turn, and he remains one shot off Mickelson's 11-under total - the same margin they had at the beginning of the day.

Andrew Johnston and Bill Haas are five shots off the lead, with Keegan Bradley and Soren Kjeldsen another stroke back.

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5:05 p.m.

Rory McIlroy is finishing up the third round of the British Open with only 13 clubs.

After a poor shot at the 16th hole, McIlroy threw his 3-wood in disgust and broke off the head.

McIlroy's frustration had clearly been building as he plodded through a mediocre round that ended his chances of making a run at his second Open title.

With two holes to play, he was 2 over for the round and back to even par for the tournament, 11 shots behind leaders Phil Mickelson and Henrik Stenson.

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4:55 p.m.

The putter has really been Jordan Spieth's downfall at the British Open.

After barely making the cut, Spieth got off to a blistering start in Saturday's third round with four birdies in the first seven holes.

But his momentum was snuffed out when he missed par-saving putts at the ninth and 10th holes, both from about 4 feet. A double-bogey at the 11th effectively finished off his round, and he limped home with a 1-over 72 and a 5-over 218 for the tournament.

After winning two majors in 2015 and making a run at the Grand Slam, Spieth has gone 10 straight rounds in the majors without breaking par. And, of course, a final-round meltdown at the Masters cost him a chance to capture his second straight green jacket.

Spieth says he's ''hitting the ball great,'' but can't get past his struggle on the greens.

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4:35 p.m.

Steve Stricker has really got to be kicking himself over one miserable hole in the British Open.

The 49-year-old American turned in another fine round Saturday, shooting a 3-under 68 in cool, blustery conditions at Royal Troon.

Stricker opened the tournament with a 67, and he made 17 pars in brutal conditions Friday for what would've been a very solid round if not for a quadruple-bogey 8 at the 15th hole.

As it is, Stricker is at 3-under 210 for the tournament and probably too far back to make a run at becoming golf's oldest major champion.

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4:15 p.m.

Phil Mickelson has surrendered the lead at Royal Troon.

An errant drive at the 555-yard fourth hole forced Lefty to settle for a par. Henrik Stenson made a two-putt birdie at the par-5 hole, giving him the lead for the first time in the British Open.

Stenson began the day one stroke behind Mickelson, who opened the tournament with a record-tying 63. The Swede rolled in a 10-footer for birdie at the first hole, quickly pulling into a tie for the lead in the final group.

No male Swedish golfer has ever won a major championship.

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3:30 p.m.

The leaders have teed off in the third round of the British Open.

On a cool, blustery day along the Irish Sea, Phil Mickelson starts out at 10 under and clinging to a one-stroke lead over Henrik Stenson. Given the conditions, it's going to be difficult for any player to go very low Saturday.

The front nine is playing much easier, with the wind mostly at the players' backs. Dustin Johnson actually drove to the back of the green on the 377-yard fourth hole, only to three-putt for a par.

The inward nine is proving to be a real beast, however. Top-ranked Jason Day felt the wrath of Royal Troon. He made four birdies on the front side to briefly climb onto the leaderboard, only to take four bogeys on the back to finish with an even-par 71 and a 1-over 214 for the tournament.

J.B. Holmes and Patrick Reed are also playing well on the outward leg, but they've still got the toughest holes to go.

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1:25 p.m.

Colin Montgomerie might play possibly his last round at a British Open all by himself.

The 53-year-old Scotsman dropped to last place of those playing this weekend after shooting 41 on the back nine into the wind for 8-over 79 in the third round Saturday. He is 12 over par for the week at Royal Troon, his home club and where his father was club secretary.

Montgomerie said he likely won't attempt to qualify for the Open again. He plays on the senior circuit now.

Jordan Spieth looked like making a run at the leaderboard after four birdies in his first seven holes got him back to even par, but he had three bogeys and a double-bogey on his last 10 holes for 1-over 72. Spieth is 15 shots behind second-round leader Phil Mickelson, who was two hours from teeing off.

Top-ranked Jason Day made four birdies to reach the turn in 32, and on 3 under.

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10:45 a.m.

Jordan Spieth is doing his best to get back in the mix at the British Open.

Spieth made the cut with no room to spare at Royal Troon and began the third round 14 shots behind Phil Mickelson. He made four birdies in seven holes to get back to even par before a bogey on the ninth to go out in 33.

He putted for eagle on three holes, including the par-4 seventh that was downwind. Spieth was about 10 yards short of the green.

Haydn Porteous also was 3 under for his round and at 1 over.

The leaders were still more than four hours from starting. The question is how much stronger the wind gets in the afternoon, and how long into the evening it blows.

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9:30 a.m.

The wind is strong and the greens are slower for the third round of the British Open.

Gusts already were approaching 20 mph (32 kph) when the third round began at Royal Troon, and they were expected to top 30 mph for most of the afternoon. That led the R&A to decide not to cut or roll the putting surfaces.

The wind and cool air was back to its prevailing direction, meaning the outward nine was playing downwind. And it showed. Jordan Spieth and Brandt Snedeker each made two birdies in three holes to start their rounds

The fun was to begin when they turned back into the wind on two of Troon's strongest holes, Nos. 10 and 11.

Phil Mickelson had a one-shot lead over Henrik Stenson. They were still some six hours from teeing off.

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