The third round of the 2026 Masters was supposed to be a coronation. Instead, it became a slow unraveling that revealed, in equal measure, the fragility of control and the inevitability of pressure at Augusta. For two days, Rory McIlroy had made the course just about compliant to his every fancy. He built a six-shot lead, the largest ever heading into the third round, and the confidence with which he handled the course indicated an early coronation. Certainly, the narrative wrote itself: defending champion, career Grand Slam already secured, poised to join the rarefied company of back-to-back winners.
As often happens in the hallowed grounds of Georgia’s pride, however, fate intervened. By Saturday afternoon, the same layout that yielded birdies in abundance seemingly began to show its selfish side. A double bogey at Amen Corner followed by uncharacteristic missteps had McIlroy battling par. By day’s end, his lead was gone. Just ahead, Cameron Young put up a bogey-free 65 in a clinical manner: fairways, greens, score. That he entered the week in form and fresh from a Players Championship victory serves only to underscore the point that momentum is critical in golf.
Still, the tournament refuses to reduce itself to a duel. Augusta, true to character, has drawn in a crowded cast: Sam Burns a stroke back, Shane Lowry buoyed by a moment of brilliance, and Scottie Scheffler lurking after a career-low 65 on the course. The leaderboard, tightly packed, suggests that caution will not be rewarded today. Instead, it is poised to crown the player best able to combine smarts with skill and, to be sure, no small measure of good fortune.
Above all else is Augusta itself. This year, it has drawn its share of criticism, with protagonist deeming it too fast, too exacting, too punitive. That said, the evidence suggests otherwise. The same terrain that exposed McIlroy’s susceptibility to pressure allowed others to surge. And, if anything, the setup has distilled the Championship; it has asked for precision off the tee, discipline into the greens, and, above all, restraint throughout. Those who have obliged remain. Those who have not are quite literally scattered.
Needless to say, the final round arrives with not insignificant tension. What appeared to be academic just 24 hours earlier has become far more compelling. No longer insulated by a lead, McIlroy must now confront the very uncertainty he hitherto held at bay. Young, for his part, stands on the cusp of a defining breakthrough; never mind that Augusta has undone many in similar positions. Around them is a field within reach. A humdinger awaits.
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.


