Two early bogeys made up for it for Lingmerth, even though he then played something.

Minus two for the day, however, meant that he fell from fifth to shared eleventh place with a total of -18.

Eleventh place is his best result on the tour in three years.

Thus, he largely changed places with Norlander, who went from twelfth to just shared fifth place in the even competition.

An eagle in the 15th made sure that the Olympic-ready Swede went around at -5 and finished one stroke ahead of Lingmerth.

Norlander was three strokes behind the winner, the Irishman Seamus Power, who won the competition after a six-hole special game against JT Poston, USA.