Myrtle Beach Classic Round 3: Snedeker's Lead Survives a Back-Nine Wobble, Hubbard Is One Back Entering Sunday — This Is Going to Be Good

Moving day at the Myrtle Beach Classic came with a side of back-nine anxiety that Brandt Snedeker did not need and survived anyway. His third-round 68 at Dunes Golf and Beach Club included a double bogey on the 13th hole — a par-4 where a wayward approach found a position that even Snedeker's reliable scrambling couldn't fully rescue — that temporarily closed a comfortable lead into something considerably less comfortable. For about four holes, the Myrtle Beach Classic's final-round narrative appeared to be shifting from "Snedeker closes out the comeback" toward "Snedeker has to hold on for dear life."
Then he birdied 15, 16, and 17 in succession. The lead, which had been trimmed by Hubbard's steady progress to one shot, stabilized at one. Snedeker arrives at Sunday's final round leading by one at 17-under par, which is the same position he occupied entering Saturday — which is either the sign of a player who manages his lead expertly or the sign of a player whose Saturday wobble and subsequent recovery produced zero net movement. Either interpretation is fine. He leads. That's what matters.
The Double Bogey and the Recovery
The 13th hole at Dunes Golf and Beach Club is not the hardest hole on the course. The fact that Snedeker's approach found a position that produced a double bogey reflects the specific way that moving-day conditions at Myrtle Beach get more demanding than the early-week scoring suggested: the wind direction shifts, the greens firm, and the approach shots that looked routine on Thursday and Friday become decision points with genuine consequences. Snedeker made the wrong decision on 13. He paid for it with two shots.
What he did from hole 14 onward is the part of Saturday's round that most accurately represents who Brandt Snedeker is as a competitor: he birdied 15 from 18 feet, birdied 16 from 11 feet, birdied 17 from inside 8 feet, and made par on 18 to walk off the course with a one-shot lead that his double bogey had temporarily threatened to eliminate. Three straight birdies after a double bogey on Saturday of a tournament where the stakes are a major championship exemption. That's experience doing what experience is supposed to do.
Hubbard's Sunday Invitation
Mark Hubbard shot a third-round 65 to reach 16-under and close within one shot of Snedeker. His Saturday was the cleanest round of the day from any contender — five birdies, one bogey, no back-nine drama, the kind of scorecard that moves you up the leaderboard without requiring anything exceptional from any single hole. He is now in the position he's been building toward all week: one shot from the lead, format in hand, Sunday ahead, and a PGA Championship entry as the prize for whoever plays 18 holes better than the other.
Beau Hossler is at 15-under, two back. Kevin Roy at 14-under. Both are mathematically alive. In practice, the Myrtle Beach Classic enters Sunday as a Snedeker-Hubbard competition, and the outcome of that competition will determine which of two legitimate professional golfers gets to compete at Aronimink against the best players in the world next week. The stakes are exactly that specific, and exactly that significant.
One shot. Dunes Golf and Beach Club. Sunday. Brandt Snedeker. Eight years since his last win. The math is simple. The execution is everything.
