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The 145th Open Championship will be a two-horse race on Sunday.

Henrik Stenson and Phil Mickelson ran away from the field in the third round with Stenson holding a one-shot lead on Mickelson entering the final round. The two dueled all day on Saturday as Stenson took a slight advantage despite some miraculous play by Mickelson to start the back nine.

Those two will face off again on Sunday in what will essentially be a two-man game for the Claret Jug. There is a five-shot gap between Mickelson in second place and Bill Haas in third place, so it would take something spectacular from anyone outside the final pairing -- or an absolute disaster from the two in it -- to see someone else win.

Here is how the leaderboard stands going into Round 4 at the Open.

1. Henrik Stenson (-12): A 68 in the conditions on Saturday is silly. Stenson is striping the ball with his irons and with how pure he's hitting it he's been able to handle the wind better than anyone else in the field. Sunday will be a chance for Stenson to win his first major and put to rest questions about his ability to win a big one.

2. Phil Mickelson (-11): Mickelson wasn't as sharp tee-to-green, but his short game and creativity from tough spots, as it so often does, kept him around and allowed him to stay within one of Stenson. Phil has a chance to break his winless streak since the 2013 Open, join rare company with six major wins and also become the second-oldest Open champion. Other than that, it'll be just a normal day on the course.

3. Bill Haas (-6): Haas will likely need to post a ridiculous number in the last round to have a chance to win, but just finishing in the top 10 would give him the best major finish of his career, a surprising stat for someone who has been as successful as he has on the PGA Tour. So even with a win likely out of reach, there's plenty of reason for Haas to be focused.

4. Andrew Johnston (-5): Beef! We keep waiting for him to fade, but Beef just keeps plugging along. He fired another under-par round with a 70 and there's no one having more fun on the course than Johnston. Like Haas, he likely has no chance at a win but this is a great chance for a top 10 in a major and a career day -- and payday.

5. J.B. Holmes (-4): Holmes had a great round coming along, going out in 32 and getting to 6 under, but like so many he faded a bit on the back nine. Even so, he finished with a 69 to move into fifth alone and, like Haas and Johnston, will be looking to earn a career-best finish at a major.

T6. Steve Stricker (-3)
T6. Tony Finau (-3)
T6. Soren Kjeldsen (-3)
T9. Patrick Reed (-2)
T9. Sergio Garcia (-2)
T9. Charl Schwartzel (-2)
T9. Keegan Bradley (-2)

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