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Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Clean inning for save
Sewald struck out two in a perfect inning to earn the save in Saturday’s 2-1 win over the Mets.
This was Sewald’s first save since April 17 versus the Blue Jays. Over his last six appearances, he’s given up three runs across 5.1 innings with a 6:4 K:BB. The lack of saves has come down to the Diamondbacks producing too few opportunities — this was just their second win in eight games in May. Sewald is at a 3.29 ERA, 0.73 WHIP and 17:4 K:BB through 13.2 innings this season. He’s converted all eight of his save chances this year despite some hiccups in non-save situations.
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Diamondbacks’ Merrill Kelly: Rebounds for second win
Kelly (2-3) allowed one run on three hits and three walks while striking out six over seven innings to earn the win over the Mets on Saturday.
Kelly had been knocked around in his last three outings, giving up a total of 19 runs across 13.2 innings. He bounced back in a big way Saturday, delivering his best start of the year in a game where he had little margin for error. Performances like this one haven’t been the norm for the veteran right-hander, who is at a 7.62 ERA, 1.92 WHIP and 20:18 K:BB across 26 innings over five starts this season. Kelly’s next start is lined up to be a daunting road assignment in Colorado.
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Diamondbacks’ Justin Martinez: Advances to bullpen session
Martinez (elbow) tossed a bullpen session Friday, Nick Piecoro of The Arizona Republic reports.
This was Martinez’s first time throwing off a mound since he underwent Tommy John surgery on his right elbow last July. Per Piecoro, the reliever was at 96-to-99 mph with his fastball during the bullpen session. Martinez still has several more hurdles to clear and plenty of ramp-up, and he’s not expected to be ready to return to Arizona’s bullpen until sometime after the All-Star break.
Moving Day at the 2026 Truist Championship lived up to the name on Saturday, as the third round featured some fireworks and stunning rounds of golf — both good and bad — at Quail Hollow.
Cameron Young began the day five shots off the lead, but an 8-under 63 helped him climb all the way up to solo third at 12 under overall — two shots back of his old college teammate at Wake Forest, Alex Fitzpatrick. Young started the day solidly with one birdie in his first six holes, but an eagle on the par-5 7th kickstarted an incredible run where he went 8 under in a 10-hole stretch in the middle of his round.
Young added six more birdies from there, including a stolen one on the incredibly long, difficult 16th with a bomb from the back of the green, and was within range of the course record of 61. Instead, he finally dropped a shot on the 18th after driving it in the trees right to only shoot a 63 and remain just off the lead.
Even with that late blemish, Young is now in position to become the first player to win back-to-back events on the PGA Tour since…two weeks ago when Matt Fitzpatrick did so at the RBC Heritage and the Zurich Classic.
To further tie those two together, the man Young will try to chase down on Sunday is Matt’s brother Alex, who he teamed up with for that second win in New Orleans. That victory earned Alex his Tour card and got him into the field last week at Doral (where he finished T9) and this week in Charlotte.
The younger Fitzpatrick shot a 64 himself on Saturday to surge into the solo lead, as his ball-striking continues to lead the field and give him tons of looks at birdies. His putter woke up in the third round and allowed him to stack birdies, as he made eight to just one bogey on his card, giving him his first-ever solo 54-hole lead on the PGA Tour.
Fitzpatrick’s lone bogey came on the difficult 16th, but he bounced back immediately by firing another dart at the short par-3 17th to set up his final birdie of the day to reclaim the solo lead.
A win on Sunday for Fitzpatrick would be a monumental step forward in his career. His win alongside brother Matt earned him his card, but a solo win in a Signature event would lock him into a three-year exemption, earn him a Masters invite for 2027 and push his earnings to north of $6 million in just three weeks of play on the PGA Tour.
He’s still a long way from that victory and will have to navigate the nerves of Sunday in contention by himself for the first time on the PGA Tour. He played excellent golf in New Orleans alongside his brother and showed no fear in his play down the stretch on Saturday in Charlotte, but it will still be a different feel in that final pairing trying to hold off Young and a hungry group of challengers behind him.
Other contenders
2. Kristoffer Reitan (-13)
3. Cameron Young (-12)
T4. Nicolai Højgaard, Sungjae Im (-10)
T6. J.J. Spaun, Justin Thomas, Tommy Fleetwood (-9)
Given what we saw in terms of scoring on Saturday, it’s hard to write off anyone in this group completely. Spaun’s 65 was the low round of the day for much of the afternoon until Young, Reitan and Fitzpatrick all bested him late in the day, and he’ll carry more positive momentum into Sunday than Thomas and Fleetwood, who both stalled out in the final two pairings of the third round.
Reitan, like Fitzpatrick, is looking for a career-changing win on Sunday. The Norwegian got into Doral last week as an alternate and his T14 finish was good enough to get him into the field this week. He’s taking full advantage of that opportunity, and his 64 on Saturday knocked Young out of the final pairing with Fitzpatrick in the final round. If nothing else, he seems poised for his best finish on Tour and a huge payday that should give him loads of confidence moving forward.
Højgaard looked like he might make a similar move to Reitan, but gave one back late on the 18th to slide four shots off the lead. Even so, the long-hitting Dane is very much a threat on this golf course and will look to make some noise from the penultimate group alongside Young on Sunday.
Im was the 36-hole leader, but his round derailed in bizarre fashion on the par-5 15th. After reaching the greenside bunker in two, he skulled his chip, which banked off the grandstand over the green, rolled all the way back across and into that same bunker.
That led to a bogey and he followed that up with a sloppy three-putt on the 17th that dropped him back to 10 under, four shots off Fitzpatrick’s pace.
Rory McIlroy’s miserable day
Notably absent from that list of contenders is Rory McIlroy, who began the day four shots off the lead and made a birdie on the first thanks to the longest drive of the day and the closest approach of anyone on No. 1. That seemed to signal the four-time Truist champ would be making a Saturday charge, but the wheels came off in the middle of his round as he made six bogeys in 10 holes from No. 4 to No. 13, including four straight to start his back nine.
The end result was a shocking 4-over 75 which, when considering he lost nearly 5.3 strokes to the field, was one of the worst rounds of McIlroy’s career. Now he’s 13 shots off the lead and will be spending his Sunday just trying to find the right feel going into the PGA Championship next week, rather than contending for a fifth title at Quail Hollow.
Updated 2026 Truist Championship odds, picks
Odds via BetMGM Sportsbook
- Alex Fitzpatrick (2-1)
- Cameron Young (2-1)
- Kristoffer Reitan (33/10)
- Nicolai Højgaard (16-1)
- Sungjae Im (22-1)
- Tommy Fleetwood (22-1)
I liked Fitzpatrick a lot more at 16-1 after the second round. I would not be surprised if he held on to win given the confidence he’s playing with, but at 2-1 I don’t love the value any more. The oddsmakers aren’t giving much up on Young either, putting him right alongside Fitzpatrick, and that feels right. He is in full flow with his entire game and has everything you want out of a player at Quail Hollow (and really any course right now). Højgaard’s performance today impressed me playing alongside McIlroy in free-fall even though we saw lower scores from others, and with his length, I think of the longer shots he’s the most live of that group.










































