Star duo Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau lead by five shots and will decide LIV Golf’s marquee regular-season event in a direct showdown.
LIV Golf Adelaide has produced many electric moments in its previous three years, but a DeChambeau vs Rahm showdown for the individual title before a packed house Sunday at The Grange has the potential to be the tournament’s most epic 18 holes.
“Going to be a good battle tomorrow,” DeChambeau said. “We’re going to have some fun.”
“I hope it’s a banger,” Rahm said. “I hope we both have a good day, and may the best player win.”
DeChambeau, the Crushers GC captain, and Rahm, the Legion XIII captain, share the 54-hole lead at 19 under, five shots ahead of Anthony Kim, the newest 4Aces player who is writing his own dramatic storyline in a week that’s offered plenty of them.
Two members of the Ripper GC, captain Cameron Smith and Lucas Herbert, are tied with RangeGoats GC’s Peter Uihlein for fourth, six shots back.
While the two Ripper players face long odds to capture the individual title in front of their home fans, the team trophy remains a distinct possibility.
The Rippers will start Sunday in second place, five shots behind Rahm’s Legion XIII, and will have the benefit of the huge local support, which they leaned on two years ago to win LIV Golf Adelaide in the league’s first-ever playoff.
“It’ll be awesome,” said Smith, who posted an eight-under 64, tying for the lowest score of the day, to move to 13 under.
“I think given that the team is up there, the energy will be high again.”
DeChambeau and Rahm, playing in the final group with Ben Campbell, separated themselves, albeit in different manners, from the remainder of the individual field.
Rahm opened with consecutive bogeys while DeChambeau reeled off five consecutive pars. DeChambeau then birdied the par-three 6th, the start of eight birdies in a nine-hole stretch.
Rahm could not keep up, and when he bogeyed the par-five 13th – the third easiest hole Saturday – he found himself four shots behind DeChambeau.
At that point, DeChambeau was threatening to run away with the tournament.
But Rahm immediately bounced back from his bogey, producing three consecutive birdies. When DeChambeau bogeyed the par-four 17th, his lead was down to two going into the final hole of the day.
Rahm’s tee shot at the par-four 18th was way left for the second straight round and ended up on the 10th teeing area. With the grandstands in his direct line to the hole, he was afforded TIO (temporary immovable obstruction) relief.
Remarkably, he followed by holing his shot from 75 yards for eagle, his five under stretch in the final five holes giving him a six-under 66 and moving him to the top of the leaderboard with DeChambeau.
ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE BY @JonRahmOfficial!
FROM TAKING A DROP TO A MAGICAL EAGLE ON THE 18TH TO TIE BRYSON ON THE FINAL DAY TOMORROW!
#LIVGolfAdelaide pic.twitter.com/YFb9d5yWIG
— TNT Sports (@tntsports) February 14, 2026
“Obviously executed it pretty well, and the rest is what you all saw,” Rahm said. “I’m not really expecting to make it. I’m hoping to hit it close but obviously ended up with the grand prize on that one.”
DeChambeau, who had control of the tournament just an hour earlier, parred the hole for a 64, tying for the lowest score of the day. It was not enough to give him the outright lead.
“Eight under is nothing to be ashamed of,” he said. “I played great today. I’m pretty proud of the way I handled myself. That was pretty sick seeing what Jon did on 18. I didn’t know you could go that far left and still have a clean lie and angle after that.”
Rahm and DeChambeau will be in the final group of the final round for just the second time in LIV Golf history. The first time came two years ago at LIV Golf Las Vegas when they played with eventual winner Dustin Johnson, the 4Aces captain.
Johnson’s newest teammate is Kim, who joined the club this week after playing as a wildcard since returning to professional golf after a 12-year absence to join LIV Golf in 2024.
He was not even in the league at the Vegas tournament, but now he’s in the final group on the final day with the two big stars, a huge step in his progress back as a world-class golfer.
“It’s been a helluva week,” Kim said, who struggled to get into Australia after not having the proper paperwork when he left last week’s season-opener in Saudi Arabia.
“Obviously not having a visa to get into this country was a start. I’ve worked hard and I knew this day would come at some point.”
Sunday in Australia could be one of the country’s biggest days in terms of professional golf. The individual leaderboard is star-studded at the top and the team leaderboard has the local heroes chasing the reigning Team Champions.
“Hopefully we can give them a good show tomorrow,” DeChambeau said. “We’ll see how the cookie crumbles.”
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Photo: Sarah Reed/Getty Images
Article Link: DeChambeau, Rahm break clear in Adelaide

