HOYLAKE, England — Jon Rahm was so eager to begin chasing down Brian Harman in the final round of the British Open that he was putting his tee in the ground on No. 1 when the starter said: "On the tee, Viktor Hovland."
Rahm stepped aside and waited his turn, but he was on a mission at Royal Liverpool on Sunday. And after five holes — amid cries of "Do it for Seve!" and "Vamos, Rahmbo!" from spectators — the Spaniard's deficit to the leader had been trimmed from six shots overnight to three.
It was the closest he, or anyone else, would get all day.
No player in a long and varied list of potential threats to Harman — ranging from major champions (Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Jason Day) to a local favorite (Tommy Fleetwood) to up-and-coming talents (Tom Kim) — could mount any sort of sustained challenge to the American left-hander on a wet and miserable afternoon on the Hoylake links.
Harman started his round on 12-under par and finished it on 13 under. None of the chasers made it to 9 under.
"It was tough. It was really tough," said Sepp Straka, who finished in a tie for second place on 7-under par with Rahm, Day and 21-year-old Kim. "It was hard to really go be aggressive.
"Hats off to Brian because it seemed like he was playing an incredible round in these conditions, which is tough when you're that far ahead. We really couldn't make any moves, so it was really hard."
Likely the most frustrated was Rahm, who couldn't reproduce his brilliance from Saturday when he shot 63 — the best score in 13 British Opens held at Royal Liverpool — to move into contention.