The Masters is set for a brilliant final round on Sunday, with seven players all within three strokes of each other atop the leaderboard, led by Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia at the top.You won't want to miss any of the action, but if you can't get to a television, you can keep up-to-date on the tournament with the updating leaderboard below:"Saturday's gone, and now Sunday's cominga very exciting Sunday," Garcia noted after the third round, per ESPN.com. "Just make sure we have a good chance coming into the last five or six holes, and see what happens."While Garcia has steadily remained below par in all three rounds, Rose surged to the top of the leaderboard on Saturday with a superb five-under 67, which included five birdies on the back nine. But lurking behind Rose and Garcia are two of the game's most talented players.Rickie Fowler, still seeking his first major, is just one stroke back after shooting a 71 yesterday. And he knows Sunday will be a battle."I don't think anyone is going to put themselves far enough out front where they can cruise in," he told ESPN.And then there is Jordan Spieth, hanging close at two strokes back following a 69 on Friday and a 68 yesterday. The 2015 Masters winnerwho also tied for second in both 2014 and 2016is perhaps the biggest threat to Rose and Garcia given his consistently excellent play at Augusta National over the past four years.Spieth has shot over par in just four of the 15 rounds he's played at the Masters. With a green jacket on the line, it's hard to imagine him making it five on Sunday.Spieth, to his credit, seems to be enjoying the experience."Waking up and you have a chance to win your favorite tournament that you've dreamt of winning and competing in since you were a kid and to be able to have your fourth opportunity now... I didn't know going into my first one if I would have five chances in my life," he told ESPN. "So it's awesome."It will also be pretty awesomeand historicif Spieth wins, as Justin Ray of the Golf Channel noted:And Shane Bacon of Fox Sports believes a win on Sunday would put the young golfer in a class of his own:Spieth is the rare sort of player who can go into a final round two strokes off the lead and feel like the prohibitive favorite. But that's the respect you garner when you consistently find yourself in the running at golf's most prestigious tournament.As for the rest of the field, Adam Scott has recovered nicely from a 75 on Thursday after shooting consecutive 69s, leaving him three strokes off the lead. He should put himself in a position to at least have a say in how things play out on Sunday. Rory McIlroy is a long shot at six strokes back, meanwhile, though if the leaders slip on Sunday, he's more than capable of shooting his way back into the running.Still, it feels as though it will be another year on hold for McIlroy's hopes of achieving the career Grand Slam. And given how dangerous Spieth has proved to be at Augusta National, earning that green jacket in the coming years is going to take something special from McIlroy.
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