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Hideki Matsuyama starts his third round with an eagle out of the bunker Saturday at the BMW Championship in Olympia Fields, Ill. Matsuyama is tied for the lead with Dustin Johnson at 1 under overall going into Sunday’s final round. Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. — Dustin Johnson says his game feels similar to last week when he had the easiest of his 23 career victories.

It just doesn’t look that way at the BMW Championship.

Every par at Olympia Fields is hard work, and Johnson played the final 13 holes Saturday with nothing worse than that. It’s what carried him to a 1-under 69 and a share of the lead with Hideki Matsuyama, leaving them as the only players under par going into the final round.

“I feel like it’s fairly similar, just obviously these conditions and the greens are a lot more difficult,” he said. “This is pretty much a major championship venue, and the conditions, the way it’s set up, it’s playing just like a major.”

Matsuyama, who had a three-shot lead early after he holed a bunker shot for eagle on No. 1 and stuffed a wedge in tight for birdie on No. 4, fell back with a string of bogeys but held it together for a 69.

“Great start and then just had to hang on,” Matsuyama said. “Just tried to do what I could to stay in, and I was happy with how it went.”

Johnson and Matsuyama were at 1-under 209. Everyone else was over par going into the final round.

Sunday is one last chance for some players to be among the top 30 who advance to the FedEx Cup finale, and one last round for others – like Tiger Woods – to prepare for the U.S. Open on a course that plays every bit as tough.

Patrick Cantlay only hit five fairways and didn’t make a birdie as he tumbled out of a tie for the lead with a 75 that left him five shots behind and might cost him a spot in the Tour Championship.

Rory McIlroy had to play left-handed to escape the base of a tree in starting the back nine with a bogey, and he finished with a shot he thought was going to be long, came up 70 feet short and led to a three-putt bogey for a 73. He still was only three shots back.

Jon Rahm matched the low round of the day at 66 that could have easily been one shot better if not for a blunder that even he couldn’t believe. He forgot to set a marker down on the green before picking up his golf ball on No. 5, freezing in his tracks when he realized what happened.

“I was thinking of somebody else or something else … and yeah, I just picked up the ball without marking it, simple as that,” Rahm said after a round that left him only three behind. “I can’t really give you an explanation. It’s one of those things that happen in golf. Never thought it would in my professional career, but here we are.”

A week ago at The Northern Trust on a rain-softened course with little wind, Johnson was at 22-under par through three rounds and had a five-shot lead. That felt easy. This does not.

Joaquin Niemann had a 68 and was part of the group at 1-over 211 that included Adam Scott (70) and Mackenzie Hughes (69). Another shot back were the likes of Rahm, Bubba Watson, Brendon Todd and Kevin Kisner, who had 15 pars, two birdie and bogey for his round of 70.

Rounds like that go a long way at Olympia Fields, the former U.S. Open course playing like one with its thick rough and rock-hard greens and enough wind to make the fairways look tighter than they are.

Woods, meanwhile, had a reasonable start to his round and wasn’t losing much ground until he hit his tee shot into the water right of the 17th fairway and then smothered a fairway metal to the left. He walked across a cart path smacking the club off the concrete and twice looked like he wanted to break it. He missed a short putt for triple bogey and shot 72.

Woods has yet to break par this week. One more round like that and it will be the first time in 10 years that he had all four rounds over par. He likely needed a top-four finish to advance to the Tour Championship.

Matsuyama is trying to end three years without a victory. Johnson is trying to win for the second time in seven days, along with positioning himself to be the top seed at the Tour Championship, which would allow him to start the tournament with a two-shot lead under the staggered start.

For players like Niemann, Hughes and Scott, they are simply trying to get to East Lake in Atlanta. All of them are one round away on a golf course where small mistakes can lead to bogeys or worse on just about every hole.

LPGA: Anna Nordqvist shot a 9-under 62 to take a three-stroke lead over Sei Young Kim into the final round of the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship in Rogers, Arkansas.

Nordqvist hit all 18 greens in regulation at Pinnacle Country Club in her second straight bogey-free round as she moved to 16-under 126.

EUROPEAN TOUR: South African golfer Justin Walters doubled his lead to two strokes with a 3-under 69 in the third round of the U.K. Championship in Birmingham, England

Walters is 12 under overall at The Belfry and has led after every round so far. He is chasing his first European Tour title after being runner-up three times.

Benjamin Hebert of France (70) and two-time major winner Martin Kaymer of Germany (66) are tied for second.

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