
PGA Championship Leaderboard 2016: Latest Scores and Standings from Sunday
Jimmy Walker tops the 2016 PGA Championship leaderboard after 54 holes on Sunday at Baltusrol Golf Course, Springfield, New Jersey after carding a round of 68 to go 11-under for the Championship.
Following torrential rain and lightning on Saturday, a huge majority of the golfers who managed to escape the cut were forced to complete their round the following day.
Walker now enters the final 18 holes one-stroke clear of defending champion Jason Day, with Brooks Koepka and British Open winner Henrik Stenson a further shot back after carding 66 and 67 respectively.
Take a look at the current standings following a busy day of action:
The 98th edition of the competition took on a usual appearance on Sunday following the storms over the weekend, with golfers and supporters alike desperate to see some blue skies on the East Coast. The competition restart allowed hope that someone would be lifting the Wanamaker Trophy by the end of the day, however unlikely that seemed.
The Round 3 stop in play meant 10 players were yet to even begin their third showing at the tournament, including joint-leaders Walker and Robert Streb, level at nine-under par.

Per BBC Sport's Iain Carter, there was early concern among some players that the Championship may not be completed until Tuesday, stating:
"The prospect of a second successive Monday finish to a US PGA Championship at Baltusrol looms ever larger. The storms were no surprise, begging the question of why players were not sent out in threes off two tees on Saturday morning.
As it is the championship is massively behind schedule and there is a worrying forecast for the coming days. Some players are already speculating it could take until Tuesday to decide the final major of the year.
"
It proved to be a round of two-halves for the joint-overnight leader, as he failed to get to grips with the conditions early on in his third outing.
The par-four third was his first area of problem as Walker found the bunker. His escape brought him closer to the pin but he was unable to find the cup from seven-feet. Streb replicated his exact shot placement and also dropped a shot as the leaderboard suddenly tightened.

Soon after Walker fell from grace with his second bogey in three holes on the fifth, as trophy holder Day sank a magnificent putt to go level with Streb at -8. However, the 37-year-old was unwilling to let his chances of glory slip as he immediately bounced back with a birdie at the sixth to tie for the lead.
Australia's Day has happy memories at this tournament and appeared to be using them to his advantage as he ended the front nine with another birdie to become the sole tournament leader at nine-under par. In addition, both Streb and Walker could only make bogeys, as the duo dropped two shots behind top spot.

It was on the back nine where Walker began to shine. Consecutive birdies on holes 11 and 12 tied him with Day before another on the 15th hole saw him become the first man into double digits. His fourth birdie of the round also saw him reclaim the lead of the Championship.
Both Day and Walker made birdies on the par-five 18th to end the day with just a one-shot difference, Walker ahead on 11-under. It was a supreme effort by the five-time PGA Tour event winner to return to the clubhouse with a round of 68 following his dismal first nine holes, but his experience and quality shone through the adversity and poor playing conditions.
It wasn't until 4:30 p.m. BST that all Day 3 rounds had been completed but there was little time for respite with many of the players enduring a marathon 36-hole contest on Sunday.

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