Zurich Classic Round 3: Fitzpatrick Brothers Hold Their Lead Through Foursomes Saturday — Now the Hard Part Starts

Foursomes Saturday at the Zurich Classic is historically the place where comfortable leads become merely adequate ones. The alternating-shot format demands a specific kind of shared precision — when one partner misses, the other inherits both the position and the responsibility — and over 18 holes on a course like TPC Louisiana, that demand produces leaderboard movement that Friday's better-ball scores made seem impossible.
The Fitzpatrick brothers emerged from Saturday with their four-shot lead intact. Their 68 in the foursomes round was not the 62 they shot in better ball on Friday. It wasn't supposed to be. It was a steady, composed navigation of a format that exposed several of their rivals while leaving the brothers themselves largely undamaged. Four shots into Sunday means four shots into a better-ball format they have already demonstrated the ability to dominate.
What Saturday Required
TPC Louisiana's foursomes layout punishes the specific mistake that foursomes formats magnify: the approach that leaves the partner in an impossible spot. Matt's iron play, which has been the defining asset of his entire 2026 season, kept Alex in manageable positions on the holes where the back nine gets complex. Alex, whose tee shots were giving Matt short-iron yardages on the par-4s, provided enough platform for the Fitzpatrick machine to keep operating at the pace the tournament required without the week's previous fireworks.
The bogey on 14 — a par-4 where an approach caught the wrong side of a green that collected it into an awkward lie — was the only genuine blot on a round that otherwise held its shape. They made five birdies. They saved par five times from positions that would have produced bogeys for most teams. They reached the 18th hole with a four-shot lead and played it conservatively, making par, and heading to the scoring trailer in exactly the position they needed.
Lowry and Koepka Make Their Move
The most important development Saturday came from Shane Lowry and Brooks Koepka, whose 66 trimmed the deficit to three shots and positioned them at 14-under as the closest team to the Fitzpatricks entering Sunday. Lowry's iron play and Koepka's driving have been the complementary strengths this team is built on, and Saturday's 66 showed the combination working at a level the week's earlier rounds had hinted at but hadn't fully delivered.
Bradley and Day faded slightly on Saturday — a 69 that left them at 13-under, still relevant but now four back of the leaders. The Sunday leaderboard sets up as a genuine test for the Fitzpatricks: they have the lead, they have the format in their wheelhouse, and they have the accumulated pressure of an entire week of carrying a storyline that involves Matt's personal excellence and Alex's professional future simultaneously.
That last element — Alex's PGA Tour card — deserves a moment. Win Sunday, and Alex Fitzpatrick becomes a full PGA Tour member. His brother, who has spent six weeks playing the best golf of his professional life, will have contributed directly to that outcome by inviting him to the Zurich Classic and then winning it with him. The Sunday storyline has layers that Sunday storylines at team events do not usually possess. TPC Louisiana is ready. The Fitzpatrick brothers are ready. Sunday is going to be something.
