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Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Power pairing of Stewart Cink and Padraig Harrington tied heading into weekend at US Senior Open
Stewart Cink sinks a birdie on the 17th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Stewart Cink reacts after sinking a birdie on the 17th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Padraig Harrington eats an apple while lining up a putt on the 10th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Padraig Harrington hits onto the green on the 10th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Padraig Harrington hits onto the green on the 10th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Stewart Cink sinks a birdie on the 17th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Stewart Cink reacts after sinking a birdie on the 17th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Padraig Harrington eats an apple while lining up a putt on the 10th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) Padraig Harrington hits onto the green on the 10th hole on the first day at the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colo., Thursday, June 26, 2025. (Jerilee Bennett/The Gazette via AP) COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Stewart Cink made up five shots over nine holes against Padraig Harrington in their head-to-head pairing at the U.S. Senior Open on Friday, leaving the major champions tied for the lead after their second rounds at the Broadmoor. Both players head into the weekend at 6-under 134, though they got there much differently. Opening on the more difficult back nine, Harrington shot 31 to open his five-shot lead. Then, Cink shot his own 31 on the second nine to pull back into a tie. Advertisement Cink hit all 18 greens in regulation, making it 35 of 36 for the week. He called that stat overrated, especially at the Broadmoor, where the real test starts on the notoriously difficult-to-read greens that all cant away from a monument lurking above the course on Cheyenne Mountain. 'You don't want to be chipping downhill on this course, it's not a secret,' said the 52-year-old Cink, the 2009 British Open champion who is playing in his first U.S. Senior Open. After Harrington shot 31 on the more difficult nine, then kept the lead at five with a birdie on the par-5 third, he was thinking there might be an opportunity to open a big lead heading into the weekend. A pair of three-putts — one on the seventh and the other on the par-3 fourth green that has been slowed down to temper the severe slope — resulted in bogeys. Advertisement Cink hit his approach on the par-5 ninth to 45 feet and two-putted for birdie to get to 6 under. His first putt showed Harrington the line after the Irishman, the winner of the 2007 and '08 British and 2008 PGA Championship, had short-sided himself in a greenside bunker, and he made his 20-footer for birdie and the tie. 'I got a lovely read off Stewart. I don't think I would have given it as much break, so that was nice,' said Harrington, who won the U.S. Senior Open in 2022. 'They're the breaks you get when things are going well.' Both players finished the round with dark clouds hovering, and the horn sounded right after they holed out, leading to a delay of about 60 minutes. They finished the day two ahead of first-round co-leader Mark Hensby, whose afternoon round got delayed. Advertisement Y.E. Yang, the 2009 PGA champion, was still on the course at 2 under and a group of five with the same score were waiting to tee off. Harrington and Cink, the only two players on the PGA Tour Champions who average 300 yards in driving distance, were well positioned to be playing together again to start the weekend. 'I love watching him play. I would hope that he probably feels similarly about me,' Cink said. 'We have mutual respect for each other. He's a world-class player and he's been doing it a long time. I would love it if we could go the distance here.' ___ AP golf:
Yahoo
a day ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
North Palm Beach's Wylie Inman continues hot streak with win at Jordan Spieth Championship
North Palm Beach's Wylie Inman can add another win to his decorated 2025 junior golf campaign. Inman, a rising senior at Dwyer High School, continued his summer momentum with a win at the Under Armour Jordan Spieth Championship on June 26 at Brookhaven Country Club's Masters Course in Dallas, Texas. Advertisement He shot 8-under for the tournament to finish two shots clear in a field of 52 golfers from the United States as well as Mexico, China, Taiwan and Spain. Inman carded 12 birdies and four bogeys across the three-day tournament. Inman's victory comes one week after earning an automatic bid to the 2025 U.S. Junior Open in a qualifier at the Eagle Trace Golf Club in Coral Springs. He and Tiger Woods' son Charlie, who earned the final bid in a three-way playoff, were the only automatic qualifiers from Palm Beach County at the event, taking two of five spots available to a field of 87 contestants. Boca Raton's Oscar Crowe advanced as an alternate. North Palm Beach's Wylie Inman celebrates his victory at the Under Armour Jordan Spieth Championship in Dallas, Texas on June 26, 2025. More: Tiger Woods walks course for son Charlie's final round at 41st Nicklaus Junior Championship Advertisement It's the second American Junior Golf Association tournament victory for Inman in the 2025 campaign. He previously won the the AJGA Junior at Rayburn Resort in Texas on March 27. Inman has earned multiple selections to The Post's All-County teams as a varsity golfer. In 2024, Inman placed ninth at state and helped the team secure a sixth-place finish overall. He is verbally committed to play golf at the University of South Florida. North Palm Beach's Wylie Inman competes at the Under Armour Jordan Spieth Championship in Dallas, Texas on June 26, 2025. Eric J. Wallace is deputy sports editor for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at ejwallace@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Wylie Inman: North Palm Beach golfer wins Jordan Spieth Championship


Washington Post
7 days ago
- Climate
- Washington Post
Minjee Lee has 1st bogey-free round at windy Women's PGA to take 4-shot lead into final day
FRISCO, Texas — Minjee Lee knows how to play in windy conditions having growing up in Australia and now living in North Texas. She also has experience winning majors. The two-time major champion is in position for another one after the first bogey-free round for anyone during the wind-swept KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Her 3-under 69 in the third round Saturday pushed her into the lead, four strokes ahead of Jeeno Thitikul. 'I'm constantly practicing in windy conditions ... It is windy, but not this windy, and it's really consistent as well,' Lee said. 'Yes, I can hit a knock-down shot, but you also have to play the wind. You have to play so much extra out here that you have to be a little more creative.' Lee was at 6-under 210 after beginning the round three strokes behind Thitikul, the world's No. 2-ranked player who led alone at the end of each of the first two days. Lee went ahead to stay with a 2-foot par at the 405-yard 12th hole when Thitikul had her second consecutive bogey, and fourth of the day on way to a round of 76. 'She played absolutely an `A' game for sure,' Thitikul said. 'I never saw her miss today at all.' When Lee did miss, she was 7-for-7 scrambling. Far from tree-lined Sahalee outside Seattle where the Women's PGA was last year, Fields Ranch East at PGA Frisco is much more open and exposed to the ever-present Texas wind that was the strongest it had been all week. There were gusts of more than 30 mph Saturday, with much the same forecast for Sunday. Temperatures were again in the mid-90s. Nelly Korda, the world's top-ranked player, described the conditions as 'just brutal' after her round of 72 that began with back-to-back bogeys. She finished with five birdies and five bogeys and is tied for sixth at 2-over 218. Lee and Thitikul, seeking her first major title, were the only players still under par and will play together again Sunday. Lexi Thompson (75), after a triple-bogey start , was tied for third at 1 over with Hye Jin Choi (72) and Miyu Yamashita (73). Thitikul, from Thailand, had the only birdie Saturday among the 78 players on the 172-yard, par-3 eighth hole, which generally plays downwind and where only 29% of the tee shots all week have stayed on the green. That 13-foot birdie was her first of the day and got her to 5 under, two strokes ahead of Lee. But Thitikul's lead was gone after back-to-back bogeys on the back side. She pushed a 4-foot par chance past the hole at the 383-yard 11th, her first miss inside 5 feet this week. Then her drive at the 417-yard 12th hole went way right into a penalty area. Lee, who won the 2022 U.S. Women's Open and 2021 Evian Championship in France, was steady Saturday with eight consecutive pars before a 4-foot birdie at the 487-yard ninth hole. Her other birdies were an 18-footer at the 515-yard, par-5 14th and a 1 1/2-foot at the bunker-surrounded 236-yard par 4 15th hole. While acknowledging that a four-stroke lead 'feels really big,' Lee isn't taking anything for granted. 'Obviously, major Sunday is a different story. This is round three, so I think, you know, I have to still dig deep and post a score, even with a four-shot lead,' she said. 'So I'm just going to put my head down and just work on the things that I can do and do it to the best of my ability.' Thitikul three-putt from 50 feet at No. 14 was her third bogey in a four-hole stretch. 'Definitely frustrated about the result today a little bit, like not really making putts like the first two days,' Thitikul said. 'But like still on the positive side that, just two players making under par after three rounds, and I'm one.' Semi-retired Thompson, in the second-to-last group, hit her tee shot into the fairway on the 517-yard par-5 first hole, a 207-yard drive into the wind. But she topped her second shot that went only 117 yards, then shanked her next shot right, a ball that was never found for a penalty on way to triple bogey. She followed with another bogey on the second hole, but had two birdies and only one bogey the rest of the way. Thompson, playing for only the seventh time in 16 tournaments this season, won her only major in the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship, but her 13 top-five finishes in majors since 2013 are the most by any player and among her 20 top-10 finishes in those events. LPGA rookie Rio Takeda opened with a bogey 6 at the first hole after starting the round tied with with Lee for second place. Takeda later had a pair of double bogeys/ Grace Kim had the best round of the day with a 68 that included six birdies and two bogeys, moving up from a tie for 68th to tied for 10th. Minjee Lee and Andrea (71) had the only other under-par rounds. Kim, among 11 players who got to the weekend right on the 7-over cut, teed off at 6:55 a.m. local time, six hours before the final group did. There was even a hole-in-one, Brianna Do acing the 150-yard fourth hole. ___ AP golf:


CBS News
21-06-2025
- Business
- CBS News
Pittsburgh-area businesses largely satisfied with boost that came from U.S. Open
Pittsburgh-area businesses largely satisfied with boost that came from U.S. Open Pittsburgh-area businesses largely satisfied with boost that came from U.S. Open Pittsburgh-area businesses largely satisfied with boost that came from U.S. Open The U.S. Open has come and gone. There was a promise of big business for stores and shops in Oakmont and the surrounding area, with hundreds of thousands of people coming to see the golf championship. Things are back to normal for Somma Pizza and Sports Bar across the street from the Oakmont Country Club, a packed house on a Friday night. "We had a lot of traffic from across the street because we are right here. We did a lot of big parties," owner Susan Somma said about business during the U.S. Open. Regulars didn't show up as much with the anticipated traffic surrounding the area. It didn't matter, as Somma saw more business than usual, up about 30%. "Wonderful. Everyone was so nice," Somma said. Further down the hill and into Verona, Inner Groove Brewing did well. Owners said they were anticipating more. During the day, it wasn't as busy when people were at the course. "They were in early or a little bit later, but not during the day," Inner Grover owner Kelly Melle said. Thousands of people were bused in and out to alleviate traffic, but it drove them past businesses without stopping in. Word on the street within the business community was that it wasn't a bad week, but it didn't necessarily meet what they hoped for. "I don't want to say disappointed. We were hoping for a little bit more. I think because you couldn't leave the Open, that was a big difference," Melle said. With all that said, these business owners want to see the Open come back. It was the talk of the town and gave people a chance to see the area. "This is a prestigious thing that happened right in our backyard. Everything we did, we enjoyed," Somma said. There is hope to change some things, like letting people leave the country club and be able to re-enter. "So that they can come and shop and maybe follow people they like, golfing during the day or evening, have a break to come into town," Melle said. In 2016, the estimated economic impact across the Pittsburgh region for the U.S. Open was $220 million. It's believed to be close to that again for this year.


Khaleej Times
12-06-2025
- Sport
- Khaleej Times
Dubai: Meet 16-year-old golfer chasing her dream of turning pro
At just 16, Anca Mateiu is chasing a dream few dare to imagine. Born in Romania and now rising through the ranks in UAE, her journey is driven by raw talent, relentless passion, and a fearless ambition to reach the very top of the golfing world. It all began when she was just three or four when her father placed a golf club, two sizes too big, into her tiny hands and encouraged her to give it a try. 'They were regular clubs, too big to handle, but I did my best to hit the ball. I felt a spark, and everything just took off from there,' she recalls. That first swing would mark the beginning of something special. 'At first, I played for my dad, because he was the one who got me into it,' she says. 'He was always there, patiently guiding me and making the game feel fun and exciting. I just wanted to make him proud. That meant everything to me.' That early start laid the foundation for everything Anca has achieved since. Today, she is the 2025 Ladies Club Champion at Emirates Golf Club and proudly represents the UAE National Team in prestigious events such as the Pan-Arab and GCC Golf Championships. 'Representing the UAE at those championships is something I'll never forget,' she says. 'Standing on the first tee in national colours gives you this rush. It makes all the training and hard work that we put in worth it.' Her journey also comes full circle with a victory close to home when she won the 2021 Romanian National Junior Girls Championship. It's a nod to her roots, and a powerful reminder of just how far she's come, both geographically and as an athlete. But it's her time in Dubai that has truly accelerated Anca's growth- both as a golfer and as a young woman with big dreams. Surrounded by world-class facilities, a vibrant golfing community, and elite competition, Anca has found the perfect environment to sharpen her skills and push her limits. The city's fast-paced energy mirrors her ambition, and it's here that her passion has evolved into purpose. 'It's been life-changing,' she says. 'Back in Romania, I didn't have access to the same level of facilities or playing opportunities and I was limited to a few months a year because of the weather. But here in Dubai, I can train year-round, compete regularly, and work with top coaches. It's completely changed how I see the game and what I believe I can achieve.' Anca trains across three premier courses — Emirates Golf Club (EGC), Jumeirah Golf Estates (JGE), and Dubai Hills — all while balancing a rigorous academic schedule at Kings' School Dubai. 'I won't lie, it's hard,' she admits. 'There are days I finish school, head straight to the course, practice until sunset, and then go home and catch up on homework. But it's worth it. You make time for what you love.' Though the demands are high, she remains grounded, a quality that mirrors her approach to the game itself. 'I try not to think too much on the course. I just take it one shot at a time and stay in the moment,' she explains. 'If I get ahead of myself, things don't happen the way I want them to. So I always focus on my routine and aim for the best possible outcome.' Mental composure is a key strength. In high-pressure situations, Anca has learned to trust her instincts and reset quickly. 'Even when things go wrong, a bad shot or a missed putt, I try not to get too emotional," she says. "Golf is like life: you can't control everything. But you can control how you respond. That's something I've really learned over time.' She credits her coaches, including Marion Duvernay, and the Emirates Golf Federation for helping her level up her game. Their support, along with that of her family, has given her the confidence to dream big. 'The EGF has backed me in ways I can't even explain,' she says. 'And General Abdullah Alhashmi has been incredible. I wouldn't be where I am without that kind of belief.' Looking ahead, Anca has her sights firmly set on the LET Access Tour - Europe's gateway to professional women's golf. 'I'd love to turn pro. It's been my dream for as long as I can remember,' she says. 'With the support from my coaches, the EGF, and my parents, I feel like I can really do this. I'm working towards being good enough, and hopefully, with a few invitations to play on the Access Tour, I'll get my chance.' College is still on the table, but Anca is clear-eyed about her priorities. 'If I'm not in college by 18, then I think that's the right time to really go for it,' she says. 'I know what I want. I want to play golf for the rest of my life.' And while her journey began in Romania, her present and likely her future lie in Dubai. 'More UAE right now,' she says when asked where her heart lies. 'It's hard to choose, but Dubai has given me so much. It feels like home.' To young girls across the Middle East looking to follow in her footsteps, Anca's message is practical but empowering. 'There's so much on offer in Dubai - amazing courses, top facilities. But you have to be serious. Put in the hours. Even if you improve one per cent every day, that adds up. Stay focused, and don't lose sight of why you started.' Just as important, she says, is the team around you. 'You need people who understand what you want from the game,' she says. 'Your family, your coaches - they're everything. When you lose or things don't go well, they're the ones who lift you back up. Without them, it's hard to keep going.' Anca Mateiu is not just one of the UAE's finest young golfers, she's a symbol of what passion and purpose can achieve. With her eyes set on a professional career and a heart full of dreams, every shot she takes now feels like a step toward the future she's always imagined — living her dream on the Pro Tour.