The Masters 2025: day three updates from Augusta – live

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It’s a sunny day at Augusta National, if not a particularly warm one. The wind is expected to pick up a little as the day goes on, but not to any great extent, and not as blustery as yesterday afternoon. An outside chance of a rain shower later as well, though even if it arrives, nothing too dramatic is forecast. Throw in some attractive pin placements, and conditions are ripe for some good scoring.

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Dunlap’s valedictory round would have been even more impressive had he not finished with three consecutive bogeys. But that wasn’t the most egregious late-round meltdown yesterday. Oh no. Not by a long chalk. Step forward 2019 and 2023 runner-up Brooks Koepka, who would be competing right now had he managed to make bogey at 18 last night. Sadly for the five-time major winner, he pulled his tee shot into the trees down the left and was forced to take an unplayable. After chopping back out, he short-sided himself in a swale to the left of the green with his fourth, chipped up weakly, and three-putted from there. A quadruple-bogey eight. Ooo-wee. Whether he feels as bad as Cameron Young, who would also be here today were it not for carelessly taking three putts from kick-in distance on 16, is a moot point, and a question I would most certainly be too scared/wise to put to the big man’s face.

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Before things get wild, let’s take this opportunity to tip the cap to young Nick Dunlap. The 21-year-old shot 90 on Thursday, and many a player would have responded by playing the illness or injury card to minimise embarrassment before withdrawing quietly. But Dunlap took his frustration out on a bucket of range balls, then came back yesterday to post a one-under round of 71. He still missed the cut in last place, of course, but if they were handing out Green Jackets for moxie, Dunlap would surely be at the head of the queue. The differential between his first two rounds is the second-biggest in Masters history, the biggest still Craig Wood’s 88-67 effort in 1936. Wood went on to win the Masters five years later, so if you’re a fan of outlandish omens, pile your cash on Dunlap winning this Tournament in 2030.

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It’s Moving Day! Here’s what the top of the leaderboard looks like …

-8: Rose

-7: DeChambeau

-6: McIlroy, Conners

-5: McCarty, Lowry, Scheffler, Hatton

-4: R Højgaard, Hovland, Day

-3: Im, Åberg, Matsuyama, Reed, Morikawa

-2: Schauffele, Fleetwood, Riley, M Kim, Harman

-1: Watson, Burns, Echavarria, English, MW Lee

E: Hoge, Homa, Taylor, Berger, Fitzpatrick, Clark, Theegala, Thompson, Rai, Thomas

… here are some big names who have missed the cut …

Dustin Johnson, Bernhard Langer, Keegan Bradley, Sergio Garcia, Mike Weir, Fred Couples, Tony Finau, Brooks Koepka (thanks to a quadruple-bogey eight up the last), Adam Scott, Cameron Smith, Billy Horschel, Phil Mickelson, Robert MacIntyre, Jose Maria Olazabal, Cameron Young (thanks to a four-putt from 12 feet at 16) and Will Zalatoris …

… and today’s tee times can be found here. We’ll get going here at 6pm BST. It’s on!

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