Stone moves clear in South Africa as Paul Dunne stalls

The Greystones golfer struggled to gain any momentum at Leopard Creek

Brandon Stone of South Africa tee’s off at the 14th during the third round of the Alfred Dunhill Championships at Leopard Creek Country Golf Club in Malelane, South Africa. Photo: Richard Heathcote/Getty Images
Brandon Stone of South Africa tee’s off at the 14th during the third round of the Alfred Dunhill Championships at Leopard Creek Country Golf Club in Malelane, South Africa. Photo: Richard Heathcote/Getty Images

Brandon Stone edged closer to a second European Tour title with a fine 66 in the third round of the Alfred Dunhill Championship on Saturday to lead by three shots at Leopard Creek Country Club.

Meanwhile Paul Dunne failed to gain any sort of momentum as he could only manage a level par round of 72 to remain five under.

Three birdies in the last six holes for Michael Hoey saw him sign for a 70 and move one shot ahead of Dunne as the leading Irishman.

However it was Stone who took the bull by the horns on Saturday. The 23-year-old South African moved to 17 under par for the tournament, ahead of compatriots Keith Horne (67) and Charl Schwartzel (68), and England's Chris Hanson (68), who were tied second on 14 under par.

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Stone, who represented South Africa at the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games this year after a number of higher-ranked players withdrew, is looking to add to his BMW Open title won in January.

He extended a one-shot overnight lead after birdies in four of his first six holes to extend his advantage and had a rollercoaster run at the start of his back nine with three more birdies and a bogey on the par-three 12th.

He reined his game in after that, completing his round with five pars as the chasing pack failed to narrow his three-shot lead.

One of those was Schwartzel, who is still in contention to join Bernhard Langer, Tom Watson and Tiger Woods as the only players to win the same European Tour event five times.

Schwartzel turned at level par for the day, but then hit a hot-streak with fives birdies in his first six holes of the back nine, before his charge was halted by a bogey on the par-three 16th.

The low round of the tournament was carded by Scotland's David Drysdale, who sank eight birdies in a faultless 64 to stay just about in contention on 11 under par.

Sunday’s final round will have an early start with extreme heat and thunderstorms predicted for the afternoon.