The Masters Leaderboard – Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau in Hot Pursuit

Good afternoon from Augusta as we bring you live coverage of The Masters leaderboard. Rory McIlroy has a two-shot lead on 12 under with Bryson DeChambeau next in line but there is an esteemed pack of golfers in hot pursuit at the front.

The Masters has a number of traditions, including that it invites winners of the most prestigious amateur tournaments to play in the tournament as well as professional players from other events. The tournament also allows competitors to use their children as caddies, which has helped create a family atmosphere and made the event popular with spectators.

After a slow start, McIlroy sprinted into the lead with a flurry of birdies in the middle part of his round. A double bogey at the 13th followed by a bogey at the 16th saw him fall back to even par, but he made a birdie at the 18th and claimed his second straight birdie to reclaim the lead on seven under.

McIlroy has been one of the most consistent golfers in this year’s tournament and is ranked first in the field for approach shots, but his short game remains an area to improve on. He has only converted one of his nine birdie chances from the greenside this week and will have to be better over the weekend if he wants to claim his first green jacket.

Bryson DeChambeau’s third-round 69 has him in the final group with Rose on Saturday. The US Open champion is the only player in the field to have shot two rounds in the 60s and will need to be even better this weekend if he wants to win his first major title.

South Africa Win World Test Championship

World Test Championship is a biennial competition for the sport of Test cricket organised by the International Cricket Council. The ICC Test Mace is awarded to the winner of the championship.

South Africa ripped the champion tag from Australia’s callused hands and consigned it to history on Saturday, claiming the first major trophy for the Proteas in 27 years with victory in an epic final at Lord’s. The South Africans, led by talisman Temba Bavuma and ace bowler Kagiso Rabada, reached the final with a stellar campaign that included series wins in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, plus a draw against India.

Despite losing the final, Australia remain top of the table and favourites to win this year’s championship. Their fine season has been built on a strong home record, a 3-0 triumph against the West Indies and a 3-2 triumph in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy against Sri Lanka.

A big draw at Lord’s – which drew almost 80,000 spectators – was a fitting backdrop for the final as South Africa and Australia met in an epic battle between underdogs and heavyweights. It was a game of colossal proportions, and one that shook the foundations of a sport that had become accustomed to seeing its best teams win everything on offer.

Rare is the major tournament that doesn’t have some aggrieved sides contemplating what might have been, but it was especially unsettling to see the champions so comprehensively routed in a fixture that smacked of a shambles masquerading as a showpiece. That’s what Wisden’s Lawrence Booth called it, at any rate.