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Dustin Johnson shares third-round lead at U.S. Open despite 7-over 77

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. -- Dustin Johnson at least gets one more round to try to redeem himself in the U.S. Open.

So does the USGA.

The best players in the world were no match for a Shinnecock Hills course that even the USGA conceded got out of hand Saturday. Putts were rolling some 50 feet past the hole and over the green. No one from the final 22 groups could match par. Phil Mickelson intentionally broke a rule on the 13th when he trotted to his ball rolling by the cup and swatted it with his putter as the ball was still moving.

"It was a very tough test, but probably too tough this afternoon,'' said Mike Davis, the USGA's chief executive. "We must slow the courses down tonight, and we will.''

It was too late for one of the wildest Saturday shake-ups at the U.S. Open.

Daniel Berger and Tony Finau, who started the third round 11 shots out of the lead, each shot 4-under 66 before Johnson hit his first shot. Johnson faced greens that made him feel as though he were putting on glass, and it was like that to the very end.

Johnson, who started with a four-shot lead, barely nudged his 17-foot birdie attempt on the 18th hole and watched it roll -- and roll -- 8 feet by the cup. He missed the par putt coming back and signed for a 77 to fall into a four-way tie for the lead.

"I didn't feel like I played badly at all,'' Johnson said. "Seven over usually is a terrible score, but with the greens the way they got this afternoon, I mean they were very, very difficult. I had seven or eight putts that easily could have gone in the hole that didn't. And that's the difference between shooting 7 over and even par."

At least he still has a chance, and he had plenty more company at the top than at the start of the day.

Johnson joined Berger, Finau and defending champion Brooks Koepka (72) at 3-over 213, the highest 54-hole score to lead the U.S. Open since the fabled "Massacre at Winged Foot'' in 1974.

It was the first time since Oakmont in 2007 that no one was under par going into the final day. With wind that was stronger than expected, and a few pin positions that turned the U.S. Open into carnival golf, it was easy to see why.

Mickelson brought plenty of attention to the 13th hole, where anything that ran by the cup was headed off the green. Worst yet might have been No. 15, where Piercy had a 30-foot birdie putt that finished rolling 75 feet away off the green. Koepka hit an approach to near the hole, and it moved a few inches to the right, and then a few more feet, and soon it was in a bunker.

Berger and Finau, who made the cut with one shot to spare, will play in the final group.

"I barely made the cut. Going into today, I needed something special to happen to even have an outside chance,'' Finau said as Johnson and Scott Piercy were making their way down the first fairway in the final group. "Whether I do or not at the end of today, I'm really happy with where I'm at.''

Right behind them will be the past two U.S. Open champions. Koepka made only two birdies in his hard-earned round of 72, leaving him poised to become the first player since Curtis Strange in 1989 to win back-to-back in the U.S. Open.

Only three players broke par, all before the final groups teed off.

"If they'd have shot 4 under this afternoon, it would probably have been the best round of golf anybody's ever seen,'' Koepka said.

Two other major champions -- Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson -- were right behind, and both had a share of the lead at one point. Both had three straight bogeys. Rose wound up with a 73 and was one shot behind at 214. Stenson had a 74 and was another shot back.

The return to Shinnecock Hills was supposed to make the U.S. Open feel like a traditional test, but it felt more like survival.

"Be care what you wish for,'' Rose said. "We've all been asking for a real U.S. Open again. So I guess we got one for sure this week."

Johnson's day began with a shot off a sandy path and three putts on the par-3 second hole for his first double bogey of the championship. His lead was gone with a three-putt bogey on the par-3 seventh. He was back in the lead when everyone around him couldn't hang on.

The scoring average was 75.33, the highest for a third round in the U.S. Open since Pebble Beach in 2000.

Kiradech Aphibarnrat had the only other round under par. He made the cut on the number, was the seventh player to tee off and shot 2-under 68. He goes into the final round just three shots out of the lead.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.