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McIlroy tees off with six-stroke Masters lead
Rory McIlroy was well in command as he teed off in Saturday's third round of the Masters after grabbing a record six-stroke lead through 36 holes at Augusta National.
The 36-year-old from Northern Ireland birdied six of the last seven holes, including the final four, to seize control on Friday, firing a seven-under par 65 to reach halfway on 12-under 132.
McIlroy tries to solidify his grip on the green jacket in Saturday's final pairing alongside Sam Burns.
American Cameron Young, the third-ranked Players Championship winner, reached six-under with a tap-in birdie after driving the green at the third and a hole out from 24 yards at the par-three fourth.
Also at six-under was China's Li Haotong, who sank a 10-foot birdie putt at the second and a three-footer at the third.
Top-ranked Scottie Scheffler went five-under on the front nine then birdied 11 to reach six-under.
He made a six-foot eagle putt at the par-five second, clutch par saves at five and six, a seven-foot birdie putt at seven, an up and down for birdie from 42 feet at the par-five eighth and a four-foot birdie putt at nine.
England's Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood and Irishman Shane Lowry started the day five-under.
Augusta National announced a $22.5 million total purse, the largest in major golf history, with Sunday's winner to take home a record $4.5 million and the runner-up receiving $2.43 million.
McIlroy won a $4.2 million top prize from last year's $21 million purse with runner-up Rose taking $2.268 million.
After ending a 10-year major win drought with an emotional 2025 Masters victory to complete a career Grand Slam, McIlroy has made himself the man to beat for a rare repeat.
McIlroy, a five-time major winner, hopes to match Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus and Nick Faldo as the only back-to-back winners of the green jacket.
Second-ranked McIlroy's spectacular Friday birdie run included chipping in from 29 yards at the 17th hole and sinking a six-foot putt at 18 for Masters history.
McIlroy has yet to find a fairway on a par-five hole but has played them in seven-under, delivering a masterclass of wedge shots and precision putting on one of golf's greatest stages.
"I haven't panicked when I've hit it off course and into the trees," McIlroy said Friday.
"I sort of feel like I'm playing with the house's money, which is a nice place to be."
Only two 36-hole leads in major golf history were greater than McIlroy's, the record nine-stroke margin by Henry Cotton at the 1934 British Open and Brooks Koepka's seven-stroke edge at the 2019 PGA Championship.
McIlroy's 10th career major round of 65 or lower also matched a record shared by Woods and Dustin Johnson.
Woods owns the 54-hole Masters record lead of nine strokes from his first major triumph in 1997, won by a Masters-record 12 shots.
The 54-hole Masters scoring record is 200 by Jordan Spieth in 2015 and Johnson in 2020.
M.Qasim--SF-PST