MEMPHIS, Tenn. Juan Guillermo Cuadrado Colombia Jersey . -- With 18 holes left, too much golf remains for Robert Karlsson to worry about a couple of late bogeys. Karlsson looked ready to run away from the field Saturday, leading by five strokes on the back nine at the St. Jude Classic. The Swede closed with his only bogeys of the day on the final two holes and finished with a 2-under 68 that dropped him to 11 under, one stroke ahead of Harrison Frazar through three rounds in this final U.S. Open tuneup. "Im very, very happy with where I am at the moment. I mean youre going to make a mistake here and there," Karlsson said. "Just keep doing what Im doing. I mean its a 72-hole golf tournament. Its a long, long way to go still, and ... Im very happy with where Im standing and lets go from there." Frazar said he thought Karlsson was in total control of the tournament so he focused only on playing. He got hot and birdied three of his final four holes to finish with a 64 that got him to 10 under. That included rolling in a 42-footer for birdie on No. 18 on a similar line to a putt he had last year. He even waved his caddie off Frazar was so confident he had the right line. "Went right in the centre, jumped in there like a rabbit," Frazar said. John Merrick (67) is third, followed by Retief Goosen, who turned in the best 18-hole score this week at TPC Southwind before being matched by Frazar. Fredrik Jacobson (68) and Keegan Bradley (70) are tied for fifth. Calgarys Stephen Ames shot 68 to sit six strokes off the lead at 5 under. David Hearn (69) of Brantford, Ont., is at 2 under, while Graham DeLaet (73) of Weyburn, Sask., made the cut after the second round but is one of 11 players who wont play Sunday. The 41-year-old Karlsson is in his first full year on the PGA Tour after earning an exemption by finishing in the top 125 on the money list with 11 events in 2010. That included a second-place finish here a year ago, when he lost a four-hole playoff to Lee Westwood in his best showing yet on the tour. He is trying to become the seventh first-time winner on tour this year and the first player to win his first title in Memphis since Dicky Pride in 1994. "Im in the last group and have a great chance of getting out there tomorrow and play golf," Karlsson said. "Im looking forward to that." Karlsson is no stranger to closing out tournaments. He has won 11 times on the European Tour and has yet shoot over par on this course in seven rounds. "Robert looks like hes not going to fall back," Goosen said. "Playing really solid. Need to get another round like this in tomorrow to get a chance to catch him." Of course, Goosen made his remarks before Karlssons final two holes. Karlsson was leading by four until he bogeyed No. 17 after sticking his approach into a greenside bunker. He blasted out to 14 feet and just missed the par putt. Frazar finished up on 18 with his big birdie putt, and Karlssons second shot on the final hole landed well right of the green. With water on the other side, Karlssons chip bounced once and stopped in the longer grass short of the green. Trying to save par, he came up two feet short and settled for a bogey that trimmed his lead to a mere stroke. "You need to land it short, and I probably hit it a bit too soft. Wanted a one-bounce and just pop up and probably hit it six feet too short," Karlsson said. The TPC Southwind has been playing fairly tough for everyone but Karlsson, with the Champion Bermuda greens baked enough from temperatures in the 30s C to make them almost crusty. The six-foot-five Karlsson posted pars on his first two holes and put distance between himself and playing partners Colt Knost and Bradley almost immediately. Merrick gave chase with three straight birdies, his third moving him to 8 under and just a stroke behind Karlsson. That was the closest anyone else got until the end of the round. Karlsson got his first birdie with a three-footer on the par-5 third and birdied No. 4 to push his lead back to three at 11 under. He rolled in a 35-footer for birdie on the par-4 sixth for a four-stroke lead that was the biggest this week until Merrick bogeyed No. 7 to make it five. With the lead, Karlsson just methodically worked his way around the course. He two-putted from 41 feet on No. 10, knocking down a 6-footer for par. He two-putted from 36 feet on the par-3 14th. Karlsson managed to birdie even when he missed a couple fairways. He needed a drop after a ruling from an official when his tee shot on No. 15 landed near a drain right of the fairway 111 yards from the pin. Karlsson stuck his shot within seven feet and rolled in the putt to reach 13 under. Frazar had seven birdies with a lone bogey in a round where contending wasnt even a thought. "Halfway through the round today, we kind of looked up and Robert was taking off again," Frazar said. "I thought he was at 14 under or something like that and most of us out there probably thought, we kind of forgot about trying to win the golf tournament." Frazar was rolling at the end, sinking a 13-foot birdie on No. 15, a six-footer on No. 16 and his long one on 18. He is seeking his first tour win as well, a position he has been in before only to not finish off an event. He thinks the key might be not thinking of winning even though people put winners on a pedestal. "Guys that win golf tournaments dont think about it until the very end and figure out what to do. Tomorrow Im not going to give it any credence. Im not even going to think about whats happening out ther except just whats going on with my golf game," Frazar said. "Ill try to look up at the end, see where we stand and see if anything needs to be done the last few holes." DIVOTS: If Karlsson wins, he would become the first player since Ryuji Imada in the AT&T Classic in 2007 and 2008 to lose in a playoff, then win the same event the next year. Phil Mickelson also finished second in a playoff at the Northern Trust Open in 2007 and won that event in 2008. ... After 83 players made the 36-hole cut, the field was cut again Saturday to the low 70 and ties, leaving 11 out of Sundays final round. Alejandro Bedoya USA Jersey . -- Jimmy Walkers first PGA Tour trophy came with a special gift tucked inside.http://www.worldsocceronlineshop.com/Belgium-Thibaut-Courtois-Jersey.html . General manager Ken Holland told Ansar Khan of MLive.com that DeKeyser has a broken right thumb. Head coach Mike Babcock said that he believes DeKeyser is done for the season.LOS ANGELES -- The estate of NFL Hall of Famer Mike Webster and dozens of former players suing the league over concussion injuries agreed Friday to pause their lawsuit to see if it will join other similar cases being reviewed by a federal judge for settlement. Websters estate and 65 former players and their families sued the NFL in February, claiming the league hid information about the seriousness of concussions and head injuries sustained during their playing careers. Attorneys for the NFL and the plaintiffs filed a stipulation Friday to stay the case to see if it should join other concussion lawsuits currently assigned to a judge in Pennsylvania. Senior U.S. District Judge Anita Brody is considering whether a $765 million settlement is enough to resolve all claims against the NFL for players who are dealing with dementia and other serious cognitive conditions ccaused by concussions sustained during their pro careers. http://www.worldsocceronlineshop.com/Arsenal-Fc-Yaya-Sanogo-Jersey.html. . Webster, who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers for most of his career, was instrumental in four of the teams Super Bowl victories in the 1970s. He died in 2002. Six of the players included in the case are deceased, including Steelers offensive linemen Terry Long and Justin Strzelczyk. The NFL declined to comment on the case. The lawsuit, like others filed against the NFL, claims the league hid evidence of the long-term damage players faced due to concussions and did not provide players with proper helmets. The players are also suing helmet-maker Riddell Inc. on claims that its helmets did not adequately protect players and that the company didnt warn players of the dangers of concussions. Riddell declined comment, citing a policy not to issue statements on pending lawsuits. ' ' '