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21st July 2019
12:19pm BST

"I'm just going to go out there. I know it's going to rain and I know it is going to be difficult at times. I'm just going to have to shoot the best score I can."The 32-year-old has shot 68, 68 and 63, and one would have to believe that another round in the 60s - even 69 - would be enough to claim The Claret Jug. During his visit to the media tent, Westwood spoke about the pressure Lowry will be under during his final round: "Shane's in the lead, he's in a big lead, but no lead is big enough when the weather gets bad on a links course. And he's going to have an awful lot of pressure on him hitting in front of a home crowd. "So he'll be nervous, it'll be a tough long day for him: the last day of a major is always long, but it's going to be 100 times worse for him." [caption id="attachment_204228" align="aligncenter" width="647"]
Shane Lowry walks out to the 1st tee during Day Three of the 148th Open Championship at Royal Portrush, Co Antrim. (Photo by Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile)[/caption]
Westwood was -10 at one stage, after three birdies in his opening four holes, but he gave two shots back over the closing stretch to leave himself on -8. Still, he knows a similarly fast start will put him back in the mix.
"I'll just go out and try to play well," he continued. "You can still shoot a low score around this golf course.
"It's such a good design that even in a really strong wind if you hit good shots you can still make birdies. I'd like to be a bit closer but I'm still in there with a chance, I think."Lowry, too, has bolted from the blocks. His opening five holes in rounds one, two and three were -2, -4 and -2. If he can produce a solid start again, he may burn off many of the chasing pack, including Westwood.
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