
British Open 2017: Tee Times, Pairings and Predictions for Sunday Schedule
Jordan Spieth and Matt Kuchar will be the final pairing to start Sunday's 2017 Open Championship action, resuming their successful partnership.
Golf.com shared the final three pairings for Round 4:
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Danny Willett will kick off the day at 7:55 a.m. BST (2:55 a.m. ET), with the final duo teeing off at 2:30 p.m. BST (9:30 a.m. ET).
For full pairings and tee times, visit the event's official website. Here's a look at the current leaderboard from Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England:
Spieth played his second flawless round in three days to move his lead up to three shots, with Kuchar nursing a three-shot lead of his own over third-placed Austin Connelly.
Things are looking up for the young star, who played one of the top rounds of the day once again on Saturday. Branden Grace stole the show with an eight-under 62, but only he and Dustin Johnson finished with better scores than Spieth.
Per the PGA Tour's official Twitter account, the 23-year-old has been supremely consistent of late:
Identifying someone who could stop him from winning his first Open Championship on Sunday is tough.
Kuchar is the obvious choice, as everyone else sits six shots or more behind the leader. The 39-year-old has yet to record a single round with a better score than Spieth, however, and really hurt himself with a double bogey on the 16th on Saturday.
Per ESPN Stats & Info, the situation isn't all that different from last year, when Henrik Stenson held on for the win on the final day:
Stenson also finished Saturday with a score of five-under, with just a single blemish on his card. Unfortunately for the defending champion, that leaves him a full eight shots behind Spieth―it would take a meltdown for the ages for him to catch the American on Sunday.
Brooks Koepka has slowed down after a great opening round, and explosive scorers like Johnson and Rory McIlroy sit seemingly too far back to play a major role on Sunday. The same holds true for Hideki Matsuyama, who would need to overcome a seven-shot gap.

Spieth has failed to keep his composure in the final round of a major before―fans won't need to be reminded of the 2016 Masters―but the course at Royal Birkdale hasn't proved challenging to the point something like that could happen on Sunday.
Unless something drastic happens, Spieth should repeat Stenson's feat from last year.
Prediction: Jordan Spieth survives final round, wins the Open.
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