HOYLAKE, England – It was short, and for Rory McIlroy, oh so sweet. In a matter of minutes he threw two eagles at the field and dispelled any thought the 143rd British Open would belong to anyone else.
McIlroy's threes on the par-5 16th and 18th holes Saturday in the third round at Royal Liverpool enabled him to leap to a six-stroke lead. Almost certainly the rest of the field is playing for second.
McIlroy started the day with a four-shot lead, but when Rickie Fowler, in the group in front of him, birdied 12 and McIlroy bogeyed the same hole, each was 12 under par. It was a dogfight, but not for long.
McIlroy, who had a 4-under-par 68, had threes on five of the final six holes, for pars at 13 and 15, for a birdie at 14 and for the eagles on 16 and 18. He made bogey on the 17th. He was in with a total of 16-under par 200, good for the six-shot lead over Fowler, who also shot 68.
"He's definitely in control of the golf tournament right now," Fowler said of McIlroy.
Sergio Garcia (69) and Dustin Johnson (71) are tied for a distant third at 207, while Frenchman Victor Dubuisson is at 208 and Edoardo Molinari of Italy is at 209.
Play was off both the first and 10th tees, rare for the British Open, because officials hoped to finish before thunderstorms hit the region. There was morning rain, but the heavy stuff didn't arrive until after the final putts were holed.
McIlroy's eagle thunder was as impressive as Mother Nature. "I heard the roar on 16," said Garcia, ahead of McIlroy.