Everything you need to know from Moving Day at the third Rolex Series event of the year.
There were two new names at the top of the leaderboard after a thrilling third day at the 2025 BMW PGA Championship.
Here is everything you need to know from Moving Day at the third Rolex Series event of the year.
Big finish earns past champion share of lead
Alex Noren saved his best until last as he fired an eagle at the 18th to share the lead with Adrien Saddier ahead of the final round. Swede Noren, who won this event in 2017 and shares the course record, produced a birdie-birdie-eagle finish to sign for a 66. The highlight of his round was undoubtedly the 17-foot eagle at the last, which pulled him alongside Frenchman Saddier on 15 under par. Saddier is enjoying an outstanding campaign on the DP World Tour, claiming his maiden title at this level at the Italian Open as well as securing three other top-five finishes. And he looked dangerous again on Saturday as he notched eight birdies and dropped just one shot to give himself every chance going into Sunday's finale.
Hatton makes huge move
With the Ryder Cup just around the corner, Tyrrell Hatton is in great shape to make a big impression for Team Europe if Saturday's spotless 64 is anything to go by. The home favourite catapulted himself into contention after firing eight birdies in round three, including four in a row around the turn and another hat-trick at the 16th, 17th and 18th to reach 13 under. He is two shots behind the leaders and ready to strike in the final round.
Lowry takes different route at the ninth
Shane Lowry showed he has bravery and talent in abundance at the ninth as he opted to play his second shot through the trees. And he got a wonderful result, sending his ball past the green before getting up and down for par. This one is not for the faint-hearted...
What a golf shot, @ShaneLowryGolf 🤩#BMWPGA | #RolexSeries pic.twitter.com/WliuEKWwlf
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) September 13, 2025
Ramsay's remarkable recovery
After Scotland's Richie Ramsay sent his tee-shot into a fairway bunker at the sixth, he could only knock his second back out onto the fairway. But instead of worrying about running up a big number, he span his approach to within a few inches of the cup before tapping in for a valuable par.
Bunker brilliance from Hovland
Faced with a tough bunker shot on the fourth, Hovland only had eyes for the pin and very nearly holed it for what would have been an exceptional eagle. So close...
World class Viktor 👊
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) September 13, 2025
He makes back-to-back birdies to open up a two-shot lead.#BMWPGA | #RolexSeries pic.twitter.com/Iid97Dz6vb