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Updated Jun 28, 2026 · 22:35
Sports World News Updated Jun 28, 2026

Chacarra Eyes Second DP World Tour Title in Three Weeks After Italian Open Lead

Spain's Eugenio Chacarra shot a six-under 65 to take a two-shot lead after the third round of the 83rd Open d'Italia. The 26-year-old moved to 17-under-par as he chases a second DP World Tour title in three weeks. Overnight leader Joaquin Niemann slipped to a share of second at 15-under alongside England's Matt Wallace. The final round has been moved up due to forecast afternoon thunderstorms.

Chacarra closes in on second DP World Tour title after taking Italian Open lead

Turin, June 28

Spain's Eugenio Chacarra moved within one round of claiming his second DP World Tour title of the season after firing a six-under 65 to seize a two-shot lead following the third round of the 83rd Open d'Italia at Circolo Golf Torino on Saturday.

Starting the day four shots behind the halfway leader, Joaquin Niemann, Chacarra, winner of the Indian Open last year and the KLM Open this year, produced another composed display in difficult afternoon conditions to climb to 17-under-par. The Spaniard will head into the final round with momentum as he chases a second victory in three weeks.

India's Yuvraj Singh Sandhu has earlier missed the cut.

Chacarra made a bright start with an opening birdie before adding another at the seventh. He gathered further momentum with two more birdies before the turn to reach the outward half in 32. Although a bogey at the 13th briefly interrupted his progress, the 26-year-old responded in impressive fashion with three more birdies coming home to finish with the day's joint-best score among the contenders.

The Spaniard, currently sixth in the Race to Dubai Rankings, credited his patience and disciplined approach for another strong performance.

"It wasn't playing easy," Chacarra said. "The wind was changing a lot and the heat made the course challenging. I think I did a great job staying patient like I have all week, playing my game and controlling what I can control."

Rather than worrying about those around him, Chacarra said his focus remains firmly on his own performance despite the quality of players chasing him.

"I have enough with myself that if I need to focus on what Joaquin or the other guys are doing, I'd go crazy," he said. "There are a lot of great players behind me and on this course people can go really low. I just need to keep controlling what I can control and hopefully I'll have a chance down the stretch."

Niemann, who held the overnight lead, slipped into a share of second after an even-par 71 left him at 15-under alongside England's Matt Wallace.

The Chilean appeared set to strengthen his position after collecting five birdies and just one bogey on the front nine. However, three successive bogeys after the turn dramatically tightened the leaderboard before another dropped shot at the 15th further dented his challenge. A birdie at the 17th was immediately cancelled by a closing bogey as he surrendered the outright lead.

Wallace remained firmly in contention after backing up Friday's course record-equalling 62 with a four-under 67. The Englishman mixed six birdies with two bogeys to join Niemann in second place, ensuring Sunday's final group will feature three players separated by only two shots.

Germany's Nicolai von Dellinghausen and Spain's Angel Ayora shared fourth place on 13-under, while South Africa's Dylan Frittelli occupied sixth at 12-under.

Denmark's Jeff Winther, who matched Wallace's course record earlier in the day, and Scotland's Richie Ramsay were tied seventh at 11-under, six shots off the lead but still within striking distance if conditions become favourable.

Tournament officials have adjusted Sunday's format and tee times because of forecast afternoon thunderstorms, with the leading trio of Chacarra, Niemann and Wallace set to battle it out in the final group for the Italian Open title.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Ravi K

Chacarra's patience is remarkable. In our country, we appreciate that kind of discipline - reminds me of how our cricketers handle pressure in big tournaments. 17-under is serious golf! Niemann's collapse shows how quickly the leaderboard can change in golf. Final round should be thrilling.

Deepika L

Not related to India much but still interesting to follow. Sandhu missing cut is disappointing - thought he had potential after his Asian Tour performances. Chacarra has become quite the star since winning in Delhi. Would love to see golf grow more in smaller Indian cities.

Ananya R

The way Chacarra talks about controlling what he can control - that's such a mature mindset. Many young golfers in India could learn from this attitude. Also, 62 from Wallace and Winther? That course is definitely gettable. Thunderstorms might actually level the playing field tomorrow.

Varun X

Respectfully, I wish Indian media would cover our own golfers more instead of always focusing on international stars. Sandhu missing cut is news but what about the guys doing well on Asian Tour? Chacarra is good but we have talent at home too. Just my two paise.

Suresh O

Golf is slowly catching up in India. Events like the Indian Open and coverage of DP World Tour help. Chacarra winning there and now doing well here shows the level. Niemann's back nine was painful to watch - three straight bogeys? That's tournament golf for you. Final round will be cracker!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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