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England's Woad turns pro at age 21 and joins LPGA Tour

England's Woad turns pro at age 21 and joins LPGA Tour

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England's Lottie Woad said on social media that she is turning prossional and has accepted membership on the LPGA Tour (Alex MARTIN)
England's Lottie Woad, coming off a victory at the Women's Irish Open and her best major finish, said Tuesday she has decided to turn professional and join the LPGA Tour.
The 21-year-old from Farnham became the world amateur number one last month and became the first amateur since 2022 to win a Ladies European Tour event when she captured the Irish crown by six strokes on July 6.
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Last Sunday, Woad shared third at the Evian Championship in France, her best finish ever at a women's major, setting the stage for her announcement on social media.
Woad's major result was enough to qualify her for an LPGA membership through the LPGA Elite Amateur Pathway (LEAP) program, becoming the first player to earn a spot that way.
"I am very excited to announce that I've decided to turn professional," Woad posted on social media. "I'm delighted to have secured a @LPGA card through the LEAP. I'm also happy to accept membership of the @LETgolf for 2026. Thank you to everyone who has helped me get to this position."
Woad is scheduled to make her professional debut at the Women's Scottish Open on July 24-27 at Dundonald Links, a berth she earned with her victory in Ireland.
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She is also set to play in the Women's British Open, the final major of the year. It will be played on July 31-August 3 at Royal Porthcawl in Wales. Woad shared 10th in last year's event at St. Andrews.
Woad, whose triumphs include last year's Augusta National Women's Amateur, had been playing for Florida State University.
Woad will have LPGA Tour status for the remainder of 2025 and all of 2026, but a tour statement said the remainder of her LPGA schedule for this season remains uncertain.
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How the 'greatest and worst shootout of all time' unfolded
How the 'greatest and worst shootout of all time' unfolded

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

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How the 'greatest and worst shootout of all time' unfolded

Lucy Bronze scored the penalty that mattered and her feelings after England's win over Sweden summed up the Lionesses' performance - and the penalty shootout - perfectly. It was both "overwhelming and underwhelming," a shootout fraught with nervy moments but lacking in quality. One goalkeeper saving four penalties. The other keeping out two. Three players missing the target. A keeper blasting one over the crossbar. After England dramatically restored their hopes when a Euro 2025 exit looked a near-certainty, a "stressful" shootout victory over the Swedes earned them a spot in the semi-finals. "I think it was just a rollercoaster, both overwhelming and underwhelming," Bronze told BBC Sport. "It was just a crazy game". Goalkeeper Hannah Hampton echoed Bronze's thoughts, saying it made for "stressful watching, stressful playing". She told BBC Sport: "Every time I saved one I was thinking 'please just put it in so we have a bit of a cushion'. Their keeper then just went and saved the next one and I was thinking 'oh goodness, here we go.'" How the shootout unfolded Sweden 0-1 England (penalty one) England won the toss, benefitting from a shootout in front of their own fans and took the first penalty. Up stepped Alessia Russo, the Lionesses' trusty goal threat. Jennifer Falk dived the right way, but her powerful effort never looked like being stopped. "Russo has left nothing on the pitch so to strike that as sweetly as she did - Falk went the right way, nowhere near it," former England goalkeeper Rachel Brown-Finnis said on BBC One. Sweden 0-1 England (penalty two) Hampton stood on the line, her nose bloodied from a collision in the final moments of extra time. Filippa Angeldahl took the first kick for Sweden and sent it towards the right but Hampton got her hands to it. "She's done her homework," reacted Brown-Finnis. Hampton knew exactly where to go. Sweden 0-1 England (penalty three) England couldn't make the most of their advantage. Lauren James tried to place her effort in the bottom left corner but Falk palmed it away. Sweden 1-1 England (penalty four) Sweden issued the perfect response. "Emphatic, beautifully struck," said Brown-Finnis. Julia Zigiotti Olme showed no nerves and left Hampton with no chance. Her well-struck spot-kick went into the top corner and Sweden levelled. Sweden 1-1 England (penalty five) Were emotions not already running high enough, England fans were soon made even more anxious. Beth Mead went for the same place as James and faced the same result - Falk saved. "It's a cushty height for the goalkeeper," said Brown-Finnis. Sweden 1-1 England (penalty six) From a moment of agony to sudden hope. Magdalena Eriksson had the chance to put Sweden in front. Instead, her effort bounced off the far post. Sweden 1-1 England (penalty seven) By this point, Falk was beginning to look like Sweden's saviour. Alex Greenwood sent her penalty down the middle. Falk dived, the ball hit her and it bounced back out. Three of the Lionesses' four penalties saved. Sweden 2-1 England (penalty eight) Nathalie Bjorn put Sweden on the verge of victory, beating her Chelsea team-mate Hampton. England had to score their next. Sweden 2-2 England (penalty nine) Who better than the player who had netted the winning kick in each of England's other two shootouts under Wiegman to deliver when needed? Chloe Kelly produced her trademark run-up, with a hop and a skip before firing past Falk. "What a night she is having," said BBC commentator Robyn Cowen. Kelly had delivered the assist for England's first goal, then the vital cross which led to their second. Now, she'd kept their hopes of a shootout victory alive. Sweden 2-2 England (penalty 10) Stepping up to take Sweden's fifth penalty, to put them into the semi-finals, was none other than keeper Falk. She had already saved three, taking one as well was "just being greedy," said Brown-Finnis. The Sweden goalkeeper could not produce another moment of jubilation for the her supporters and skied her kick over the bar. Sweden 2-2 England (penalty 11) Surely, after yet another miss, England would respond? Not this time. Grace Clinton's weak effort rolled to the left which Falk easily saved. By this point, it looked like the shootout might never end. "I can't believe how many penalties we've missed," said Brown-Finnis. Sweden 2-2 England (penalty 12) Sweden once again had the opportunity to win the match. Sofia Jakobsson placed the ball on the spot with just four of the 12 penalties before her having been scored. She also went to the left, but Hampton tipped it onto the post with her outstretched hand. "These are cats with nine lives, the Lionesses," Brown-Finnis said. Sweden 2-3 England (penalty 13) England's most decorated player stepped up for the big moment. Bronze had no intention of wasting her chance and delivered the perfect penalty, thrashing it down the middle as Falk dived to the right. The Lionesses have talked throughout this tournament about producing "proper English" performances - and Bronze's penalty was an "old school Stuart Pearce type" of kick, said Brown-Finnis. She added: "Full of passion, full of heart, no nonsense penalty right into the roof of the net. Great strike, great player, great time." Sweden 2-3 England (Smilla Holmberg misses, England win) Sweden had to score to keep their hopes alive. The job fell to 18-year-old Smilla Holmberg to try to level. Holmberg didn't even hit the target. She sent her strike soaring over the crossbar. The English players ran off in celebration. The Lionesses were through. How history-chasing Italy could threaten England at Euro 2025 'Terrifying watching' - What the pundits said England's record goalscorer Ellen White, who was part of the team that won Euro 2022, said the shootout made for "terrifying watching". She said: "I think you've got to give full credit to Falk as well and the way she saved a lot of those penalties for Sweden. I'd never say a bad word about a player who's missed a penalty." England displayed "character" in an "amazing" show of resilience to turn it around from 2-0 down, added former England goalkeeper Karen Bardsley. "Honestly that was incredible, such tension," she said. "The way the game went, the substitutions, the doubt, the gameplan. So much drama. "The saves from Hampton and the authority from Bronze. What a fantastic game and what character England showed. Such self-belief to bring them back into the game." It was only a game in the last eight, but Brown-Finnis said the "magnificent finish" was "worthy of any final". Former England captain Steph Houghton added that she thinks the Lionesses have what it takes to get to the final. "Ultimately, a massive, massive win for England to come back and take it to penalties," she added. "Hannah Hampton had a great game." 'Greatest and worst of all time' - fans' reaction Maverick: After all these years we have finally found a team who where so diabolical at taking penalties that we managed to win one. Other than that massive praise to Lucy Bronze who was and absolute star tonight her performance was outstanding in every way a ture leader. NB22: "This must have been the greatest penalty shootout ever - and worst penalty shootout ever at the same time." Frankie: "Bronze was immense all game and Kelly's introduction was the turning point "Sweden could and probably should have had it sewn up by half time "Surprised Bronze didn't take one of the first 5 pens though she did have strapping on her leg "Her penalty reminded me of Stuart Pearce's all those years ago" Kyle: "The penalty shootout was a comedy of errors for the most part. There were a couple of good penalties, but they were mostly dreadful- underpowered and too near the keepers. "Both teams look like they could do with a lot of practice in that area. "Anyway, onward and upward." Euro 2025 fixtures and group standings Euro 2025 TV & BBC radio schedule The 16 confirmed squads for Euro 2025

‘The girls got behind me': Hannah Hampton after England penalty heroics
‘The girls got behind me': Hannah Hampton after England penalty heroics

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‘The girls got behind me': Hannah Hampton after England penalty heroics

England goalkeeper Hannah Hampton has thanked her Lionesses teammates for their support after her penalty shootout heroics secured her country a semi-final spot at Euro 2025. Hampton went onto save two penalty kicks during the shootout to secure England a sixth consecutive tournament semi-final, and a tie against Italy. The Lionesses came from two goals down against Sweden to take the match to extra time before Sarina Wiegman's side squeezed through on penalties. Hampton thanked her teammates for their support after a turbulent time leading up to her becoming England first choice. 'Overall very happy but would have preferred it not to go to penalties and cause the extra stress that it did,' Hampton said. 'The girls got behind me a lot so to be able to go out and help them tonight and the whole team put on a performance like we did was a lovely moment.' Hampton's Swedish counterpart Jennifer Falk was in superb form during the shootout, saving three consecutive England penalties. The 32-year-old then stood up to take the Swedes' fifth penalty to win the game, but she sent her effort flying over the crossbar. When asked whether she was surprised when Falk stepped up to the spot, Hampton admitted she was surprised by her counterpart, and despite the outcome, should be perceived in a positive light after four saves during the shootout. 'I was more panicking that we didn't have any data on her and where she was going but I was a bit surprised. She did unbelievably well in the shoot-out itself with all of the saves she did and I was thinking she might just focus on saving them like I tried to do! 'It's always a high pressured moment a penalty shootout so she had enough bravery to step up for Sweden and she's seen as a hero for the amount she saved.'

British Open Championship 2025 updates: It's a five-way tie for the 18-hole lead
British Open Championship 2025 updates: It's a five-way tie for the 18-hole lead

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Scheffler caught fire on his way in, making back-to-back birdies on Nos. 16 and 17, setting himself up to contend for the rest of the week as he seeks the fourth major title of his career. The two-time Masters champ won the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow earlier this year. Scheffler — who made headlines on Tuesday when he offered deep insight into his life as the best player on the planet — entered as a significant betting favorite to hoist the Claret Jug and he's off to a good start at Royal Portrush. In fact, Data Golf already has Scheffler tabbed as having a 24 percent chance of winning the tournament as of 11 a.m. ET. A Buddhist monk is contending at the British Open Championship If you woke up on Thursday morning and wondered who the Thai golfer was near the top of the 2025 British Open leaderboard, you weren't alone. But there are some amazing facts about Sadom Kaewkanjana, an ordained Buddhist monk, started off the first round at Royal Portrush with some low numbers. Click here to read more about him. Rory McIlroy tees off in first round of 2025 British Open Championship The hometown darling has arrived. Rory McIlroy hit his first tee shot of the 2025 British Open Championship just after 10 a.m. ET, marking the official start of his quest for a sixth major championship and the first in his home nation of Northern Ireland. He's been dealing with maximum fanfare all week, but he's embracing it. McIlroy, who won the Masters in April to complete the Career Grand Slam, looks to capture his second British Open title. His first came at Royal Liverpool in 2014. McIlroy missed the cut last time the event was held at Royal Portrush in 2019, which saw Irishman Shane Lowry emerge victorious. Matt Fitzpatrick cards 67 to join tie for clubhouse lead Matt Fitzpatrick is on the board with a stellar round on Thursday at the 2025 British Open. The Englishman made one bogey, three birdies and an eagle, which came on the par-5 second hole. He had a highlight-reel hole-out for birdie on the par-3 16th, which got him to 4 under. Fitzpatrick made par on the final two holes to close out a solid 4-under 67, putting him in contention after 18 holes as he seeks the second major championship of his career. He won the 2022 U.S. Open at Brookline. Jon Rahm rebukes fan for whistling in his backswing Quiet, please! Daniel Brown holes insane chip to make birdie Check out this one from England's Daniel Brown. He holed out from off the green on No. 6 for his second straight birdie to get back to even par for the day. Heavy rain falling at Royal Portrush as play continues in the first round of the British Open It may come as no surprise, but rain is falling at the British Open. A large cell of showers is hanging over the entire northern coast, and radar indicates it's going to be like this for a while. And likely tomorrow. And the next day. The elements and weather conditions have, for centuries, played a massive role in making golf's oldest major exceedingly challenging, and this week appears to be no exception. Click here to see the full weather outlook for this week at Royal Portrush. Jacob Skov Olesen, Haotong Li lead at 2025 British Open Championship One of the beautiful elements of major championships, especially the British Open, is the wide variety of players who get to compete. You probably hadn't heard of Jacob Skov Olesen before you woke up and checked the leaderboard, but here he is, sharing the lead with Haotong Li as of 8:20 a.m. ET. Olesen made an eagle on the par-5 12th and chipped in for birdie on No. 15 before stumbling on the 18th with a bogey. Still, it was good enough for a 4-under 67 which puts him in prime position to make the cut. Read more about Olesen here. Meanwhile, Li carded the same score, 67, in much different fashion. Li had four birdies and 14 pars. About as clean as it gets. We haven't heard from Li in a while, but you might remember him from his solid run of major tournament performances several years ago. Li finished in solo third at the 2017 Open Championship, which saw Jordan Spieth win at Royal Birkdale, and he also has top 20 finishes at both the PGA Championship (2020) and the U.S. Open (2018). Hot-tub Time Machine at Portrush It's early but Phil Mickelson and Lee Westwood are partying like its 1999 at Royal Portrush. The two old guys are leading the way at the 153rd Open at 2 under. Mickelson, 55, went out in 34, making both of his birdies at the par 5s — Nos. 2 and 7 — and a wild hole-out par (as detailed below) at the third. Westwood, 52, had to go through qualifying but he's back for his 90th major and 28th Open, three years on from his last appearance. He's making the most of his opportunity. He birdied the second and sixth holes to tie Mickelson. Weather forecast As weatherman Al Roker would say, here's what's happening in your neck of the woods — if you happen to be attending the 153rd Open at Royal Portrush. Bright early on before the clouds move in. Mainly dry in the morning with a chance of heavier showers as the day goes on, with potential for thunder. The risk of rain should gradually ease later in the evening. Winds changeable with potential gusts of up to 25-35mph. Indeed, the sun is popping through the clouds this morning in County Antrim and it's a very comfortable 61 degrees, which has the likes of Padraig Harrington donning shirtsleeves. Mickelson magic What will Phil Mickelson do next? How about one of the most Phil Mickelson-esque pars we've seen in a long time. First, old Lefty left his bunker shot at the par-4 third hole in one of Portrush's fearsome bunkers. Could a big number be in the offing? Not so fast my friends. Mickelson, the 2013 Open champion, still is an artist with the wedges. And on his second attempt in the bunker was perfection. Just another routine par for Mickelson. And they're off... Irishman Padraig Harrington had the honor of hitting the first tee shot of the 153rd British Open at 6:35 a.m. local time on Thursday, and while the 53-year-old wanted to make it perfectly clear that he doesn't think of himself as a ceremonial golfer, he enjoyed the moment and found the fairway. Harrington knocked his approach from 210 yards to 15 feet and also had the honor of making the 153rd Open's first birdie. Northern Irishman Tom McKibbin, in contrast, had the dubious distinction of making the championship's first bogey. McKibbin redeemed himself with the first eagle of the championship at the par-5 seventh. In any event, they are off and threesomes will continue to tee off from the first tee in 11-minute intervals until 4:16 p.m. local time. British Open Championship 2025 Thursday first round tee times Click here for the complete list of tee times for Thursday's opening round. Here are some of the notable groups: All times eastern 4:58 a.m. - Xander Schauffele, Jon Rahm, J.J. Spaun 5:09 a.m. - Scottie Scheffler, Collin Morikawa, Shane Lowry 9:48 a.m. - Robert MacIntyre, Justin Rose, Bryson DeChambeau 9:59 a.m. - Jordan Spieth, Viktor Hovland, Ludvig Aberg 10:10 a.m. - Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Thomas How to watch the first round of the 2025 British Open Championship Streaming: 1:30 a.m. ET to 4 a.m. ET on Peacock TV: 4 a.m. ET to 3:30 p.m. ET on USA Network Radio: 2 a.m. ET to end of play on Sirius XM PGA Tour Radio USA's coverage will also stream on the NBC Sports app. In addition, official website has featured groups and a channel dedicated to Calamity Corner, the par-3 16th hole. The R&A also announced this will be the first pro golf event with the Spidercam, which will by flying around the 18th hole all week. British Open Championship 2025 Thursday first round weather forecast at Royal Portrush Thursday is projected to be the windiest day of the week, according to forecasters, who are calling for cloudy conditions with winds at 15-25 mph from the southeast. Expect temperatures in the upper 60s and rain showers for most of the day. Click here for the full weather forecast at Royal Portrush this week. British Open Championship 2025 betting odds, picks, predictions Scottie Scheffler enters the 2025 British Open as the favorite to capture his fourth major title. Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm have the next shortest odds. See more betting odds and check out who the Golfweek staff is picking to win the Claret Jug this year. British Open Championship 2025 prize money, purse The 2025 payouts are the same as 2024's, with the winner receiving $3.1 million of the $17 million total purse. See the complete prize money breakdown here. Who won the British Open Championship in 2024? World No. 3 Xander Schauffele enters Royal Portrush as the defending champion. He was victorious at Royal Troon in 2024, edging out Justin Rose and Billy Horschel by two strokes. Other past winners in the field this week include Brian Harman (2023), Cam Smith (2022), Collin Morikawa (2021), Shane Lowry (2019), Jordan Spieth (2017) and Rory McIlroy (2014), among others. There are 16 past champions in all playing in the 2025 Open. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: British Open Championship 2025 first round updates: Five tied for lead

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