One swing can go a long way, whether the shot ends up in the water, on the green or in the hole.
One swing cost Mito Pereira his first major championship. It validated the rise of Tom Kim. And for Jordan Spieth, it had observers on the edge of their seats as he stood on the edge of a cliff.
What follows is a year in review on the PGA Tour based on significant shots from all 14 clubs in the bag.
DRIVER: Mito Pereira came to the 18th hole at Southern Hills with a one-shot lead in the PGA Championship, a chance for the Chilean to win his first major and give South America the career Grand Slam. A quick swing sent his drive into the creek, the start of a meltdown that led to double bogey. Justin Thomas went on to beat Will Zalatoris in a playoff.
3-WOOD: Justin Thomas drove the par-4 17th with a 3-wood in a playoff for birdie and the lead on his way to winning the PGA Championship. The best 3-wood goes to Hideki Matsuyama at the Sony Open, a shot he never saw because the sun was in his eyes. In a sudden-death playoff, he had 277 and laced it to 3 feet for eagle. That was the highlight for the reigning Masters champion, who dealt with injuries the rest of the year.
2-IRON: Tom Kim already captured attention by winning the Wyndham Championship. The 20-year-old really introduced himself in a Saturday afternoon fourballs match at the Presidents Cup. The match was all square. The opponents were Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele. The audience included a trio of U.S. major champions who had finished their matches. He drilled his 2-iron to 10 feet and slammed his cap to the ground when he made the winning putt.
3-IRON: Scottie Scheffler had a four-shot lead in the Masters and reason to be nervous after his tee shot on the 18th hole Saturday headed for the pines. Spotters found the ball. He took a penalty drop. And then with trouble looming, he ripped a 3-iron from 237 yards away off pine straw. The ball landed on the green and rolled just over the back, setting up two putts and a bogey that felt much better.
4-IRON: Rory McIlroy was off to a sluggish start in the DP World Tour Championship and needing to make a move. He birdied the 16th and 17th. And on the par-5 18th, from 237 yards away, he hit 4-iron to 3 feet for eagle and a 68. That sparked him to a 65-68 weekend to finish fourth and capture the DP World Tour Points and the FedEx Cup in the same season.
5-IRON: Matt Fitzpatrick was tied for the lead with Will Zalatoris when he pushed his drive slightly to the right on matted rough on the 15th hole at The Country Club. From 225 yards away, Fitzpatrick hit 5-iron to 15 feet for a birdie that gave him the lead for good on his way to winning the U.S. Open.
6-IRON: As if going for that first PGA Tour victory wasn’t hard enough, Sepp Straka faced heavy rain on the par-5 18th hole of the Honda Classic. He was tied for the lead when he found the fairway and then hit 6-iron to the heart of the green, setting up a two-putt victory for the win.
7-IRON: Jordan Spieth’s tee shot on the eighth hole of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was inches past the red hazard line and about a foot from going over a 60-foot cliff. His caddie tried three times to talk him into taking a penalty drop. Spieth chose to play 7-iron for what he called the most nerve-wracking shot of his life. It was part of a 63. And it was an example of how there’s rarely a dull moment with this guy.
8-IRON: Patrick Cantlay had a one-shot lead on the final hole of the BMW Championship when he drove into a bunker. The ball was above his feet, 158 yards to a pin on a steeply pitched green. He took 8-iron and tried to slice it as hard as he could. It found the green, he two-putted for par and became the first back-to-back winner of the BMW in the FedEx Cup era.
9-IRON: The toughest test in golf was every bit of that for Matt Fitzpatrick on the final hole of the U.S. Open. He was in a bunker, 156 yards away, a steep lip in his line. Fitzpatrick hit what he calls a “squeezy fade” with a 9-iron to 18 feet that secured his first major.
PITCHING WEDGE: Bubba Watson was one shot inside the cut line at the Masters on Friday when he put his drive in the trees right of the fairway, seemingly no way out. Bubba found a way, hitting a pitching wedge through a tiny gap and onto the green 3 feet away for birdie. Bubba Golf.
GAP WEDGE: Jon Rahm had not made bogey all weekend until his first one on the 12th hole Sunday of the Spanish Open, cutting his lead to two shots. He responded with a gap wedge to 6 feet for birdie that sent him on his way. It was one of three wins this year for Rahm, including national Opens in Mexico and Spain.
LOB WEDGE: Max Homa was one shot behind and in a swale left of the 18th green at the Fortinet Championship. Danny Willett was 4 feet away for birdie with a one-shot lead. Homa used lob wedge to hole out for birdie, and he won when Willett three-putted in the most stunning finish of the year. For Homa, it was another chapter in a year when his game exceeded his social media skills.
PUTTER: Cameron Smith can never be counted out when the putter is in his hand, even when he’s not on the green. He was 40 yards away from the flag on the 17th hole at St. Andrews with a one-shot lead in the British Open. The Road Hole bunker was in the way. He skillfully putted with enough pace around the bunker to 10 feet, made the par and finished with a birdie to win the claret jug.
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England fans in Manchester, London and Brighton were left stunned and disappointed by Harry Kane’s penalty miss and their side’s elimination from the World Cup.
Ockie Strydom and Scott Jamieson share lead on 15 under after three rounds of the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek; South African Strydom equals Jamieson’s course record of 63; watch the final round live from 9am on Sunday on Sky Sports Golf
Last Updated: 10/12/22 3:56pm
Ockie Strydom’s course-record 63 featured just one bogey, at the 16th
Ockie Strydom matched Scott Jamieson’s course-record 63 to join the Scot at the top of the leaderboard heading into the final round of the Alfred Dunhill Championship.
Jamieson followed Friday’s record-breaking effort at Leopard Creek with a two-under 70 to sit on 15 under alongside Strydom, who raised South African supporters’ hopes of another home champion with a surge up the standings.
The 37-year-old is yet to win on the DP World Tour but gave himself every chance as he eagled the second to set the tone for a third round featuring eight birdies between the fourth and 15th.
But for a bogey at the short 16th, Jamieson’s record would have stood for just 24 hours but as it was, Strydom had to settle for equalling it as he finished with two pars.
Jamieson, the overnight leader, steadied himself after an up-and-down front nine featuring three bogeys and two birdies, coming home in 34 for a share of the lead, with the pair’s nearest challengers two shots back on 13 under.
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That three-strong group is made up of South African pair Oliver Bekker and Dean Burmester, both of whom carded four-under 68s, and England’s Dale Whitnell, whose 66 featured two eagles – one of them holed from a greenside bunker at the driveable par-four eighth.
The tournament has had a home winner in seven of the past nine editions, and the list of candidates to make it eight in 10 also includes Branden Grace and Dylan Frittelli, who are three back on 12 under along with Adrian Otaegui of Spain, whose round of 65 was bettered only by Strydom on the day.
English pair Nathan Kimsey and Eddie Pepperell began the day tied for second on 10 under but shot 74 and 73 respectively to drop off the pace.
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Rory McIlroy thought his differences with Greg Norman over a Saudi-funded rival golf league had been patched up. That changed when Norman accused him of being “brainwashed” by golf’s ruling brass.
“I thought, You know what? I’m going to make it my business now to be as much of a pain in his arse as possible,’” McIlroy said in a lengthy interview in the Sunday Independent in Ireland.
The interview with writer Paul Kimmage is the second of three parts. McIlroy also details how his relationship soured with longtime friend Sergio Garcia.
McIlroy and Tiger Woods have said Norman, the CEO and commissioner of LIV Golf, needs to be out of the picture for golf to have any chance of coming together. Norman said that won’t be happening.
“I pay zero attention to McIlroy and Woods, right?” Norman said in an interview with British magazine Today’s Golfer. “They have their agenda for whatever reason. They’re saying whatever they want to say. It has no bearing or effect on me. I’m going to be with LIV for a long, long period of time.”
McIlroy has been taking shots at Norman since he won the Canadian Open in June, a day after LIV Golf finished its inaugural event outside London. He went out of his way to point out his 21st career PGA Tour win was “one more than someone else.”
“That gave me a little extra incentive today,” McIlroy said.
The reference was to Norman, who has 20 career PGA Tour wins and now leads LIV Golf.
When he had a chance to return to No. 1 in the world ranking at the CJ Cup in October, McIlroy was asked if he had a goal of how many weeks he would like to be No. 1 by the end of his career. He mentioned 332, which is one more than Norman.
Most recently in Dubai last month, McIlroy said the fractured state of golf between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf could not heal as long as Norman is involved.
“I think Greg needs to go. I think he just needs to exit stage left,” McIlroy said, adding that no one would be willing to talk “unless there’s an adult in the room.”
Woods echoed those comments at the Hero World Challenge this week in the Bahamas.
“I am not going anywhere. I don’t care what anybody says. I’m not going anywhere,” Norman told Today’s Golfer. “I am so proud of the position I am in and maybe, maybe, it’s my leadership that has them scared. Maybe.”
McIlroy said the rift began in February 2020 when talk first surfaced about a “Premier Golf League” backed by Saudi money. McIlroy was the first top player to say he wasn’t interested, adding he wanted to be on the right side of history.
He referenced a moment when Arnold Palmer stood up for the PGA Tour against Norman’s proposed World Golf Tour in 1994. Palmer’s words put a quick end to it.
“He (Norman) wasn’t happy, and we had a pretty testy back-and-forth and he was very condescending. ‘Maybe one day you’ll understand’ and all this (stuff),” McIlroy said in the Independent interview.
Then, in April this year, McIlroy watched an ESPN documentary on Norman’s collapse to lose the 1996 Masters and was moved enough to send Norman a message that included, “Hopefully it reminds everyone of what a great golfer you were.”
McIlroy said Norman had sent him a touching note after McIlroy lost a four-shot lead in the final round of the 2011 Masters.
“He was great,” McIlroy said. “So I said to him, ‘Watching it reminded me of how you reached out to me in 2011, and I just want to say that I’ll always appreciate it. It meant a lot. I know our opinion on the game of golf right now is very different, but I just wanted you to know that and wish you all the best.’
“So, a bit of an olive branch, and he came back to be straightaway: ‘I really think golf can be a force for good around the world. … I know our opinions are not aligned but I’m just trying to create more opportunities for every golfer around the world.’
“Fine. Really nice,” McIlroy said. “Then, a couple of weeks later, he does an interview with The Washington Post and says I’ve been ‘brainwashed by the PGA Tour.’
“We’ve had this really nice back-and-forth and he says that about me.”
McIlroy added in the interview that the PGA Tour is lucky Norman is involved in LIV because “I think if they had found someone less polarizing, LIV could have made more inroads.”
McIlroy said his two golf idols were Woods and Garcia, describing the Spaniard as an exciting young player. They were at each other’s weddings; McIlroy was even a groomsman for Garcia.
McIlroy said he didn’t know Garcia was joining LIV Golf until the Spaniard said to him on the range at the Wells Fargo Championship that he had a new plane and offered McIlroy a ride to the first LIV event near London.
The relationship soured at the U.S. Open, the week after McIlroy won in Canada. McIlroy had said in his interview that week that players joining LIV Golf were taking the easy way out.
He said he awoke Friday of the U.S. Open to a text from Garcia “basically telling me to shut up about LIV, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.”
“I was pretty offended and sent him back a couple of daggers and that was it,” McIlroy said.
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Victor Hovland three shots clear heading into final day after third-round 64, with Scottie Scheffler his closest challenger; continue to watch the Hero World Challenge golf throughout the week, live on Sky Sports Golf on Sunday from 4pm.
Last Updated: 04/12/22 7:35am
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Highlights from the third round of the Hero World Challenge in The Bahamas
Highlights from the third round of the Hero World Challenge in The Bahamas
Viktor Hovland carded six birdies on the back nine and fired a blistering eight-under-par round 64 to extend his lead to three strokes at the Hero World Challenge on Saturday in Albany, Bahamas.
Hovland sits on 13 under after 54 holes as he vies to repeat as champion of the event, with Scottie Scheffler within striking range at 10 under after his six-under 66.
Cameron Young (third-round 68) and Justin Thomas (66) are five shots back at eight under.
Hovland has led or tied for the lead in all three rounds, and made 10 birdies on Saturday, one more than his career-high in official PGA Tour events, recording the low round of the day. His round included two bogeys, including the par-four 18th.
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“I missed probably like a 10-footer on the first hole and lipped out and I kind of thought, Here we go again,’ but after that it was a lot of putts that went in,” Hovland said.
“You need that on a day like today when the winds are down and you can be a little bit more aggressive. That’s the only way you can make that many birdies, so that was a lot of fun.”
Hovland would be just the second player to successfully defend a title at the event, joining event host Tiger Woods in 2007.
Scottie Scheffer is in the mix, three shots back from Viktor Hovland
Scheffler did his best to stay close, posting five birdies and an eagle on the par-5 15th. There are two eagles so far from the 20-player field and Scheffler has both of them.
“I played really solid, kept the ball in front of me, hit a lot of fairways,” Scheffler said. “Felt like I did a good job just keeping the course in front of me and giving myself some changes.”
Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa shot matching 69s to sit six shots back at seven under in a tie for fifth. Jon Rahm (68) sits solo seventh at four under, nine shots back.
Continue to watch the Hero World Challenge golf throughout the week, live on Sky Sports Golf on Sunday from 4pm.
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A Mississippi man has been arrested two days after he fled a scene where he bit off another man’s nose, authorities said. Bay St. Louis Police said that 51-year-old Mark Curtis Wells of Biloxi was arrested on Wednesday.
Police said they responded to the attack shortly after 9:30 p.m. at the Hollywood Casino Gulf Coast parking lot. There, Police Chief J. Toby Schwartz said officers found the unnamed victim with a “disfiguring facial injury” after Wells had “bit the nose off.” According to police, the incident occurred after the two men got into an argument about an earlier golf game at the Bridges Golf Club, located just a walking distance away.
“The argument continued throughout the day amongst several of the golf participants until it culminated in the casino parking lot,” police said. “Mark Wells fled the scene in a dark colored Tesla.”
Wells was arrested on Wednesday and has been charged with felony mayhem. According to Biloxi newspaper The Sun Herald, Wells was booked just before midnight and released less than an hour later. He had a $50,000 bond, the paper said after reviewing booking records.
If found guilty, Wells could be sentenced up to seven years in prison. Police said that the investigation is ongoing.
NASSAU, Bahamas — All it takes is one shot to settle the nerves, to create momentum or restore confidence, or in the case of Justin Thomas, to stop the bleeding.
Thomas has won the PGA Championship twice, and both times he looked back to a moment before the final round that was crucial to winning.
It’s like that for other major champions, too.
In a series of interviews, they shared the signature shot of the major they won, along with a shot that was pleasing because of the subtle quality or the circumstances.
MASTERS
Scottie Scheffler was so nervous about his three-shot lead going into Sunday at Augusta National that he was in tears that morning. Two holes into the final round, the lead was down to one and Scheffler was in trouble again on the third hole.
The memorable shot of what became a runaway victory was chipping in from short of the third green for birdie. Smith made bogey for a two-shot swing, the lead was back to three and no one got closer the rest of the way.
“The timing of it was great,” Scheffler said with a laugh. “I was trying to get it up there to have a putt. At worse, I’d have a good look at par. And it happened to go in.”
But it was another wedge a few holes earlier that really stood out. The one place to avoid with the traditional Sunday pin on No. 1 is long. Scheffler was in the trees and hit a good punch shot that rolled just over the back.
“It’s one of the hardest pitches on the course,” he said. “You have this shelf. You’re down below the green. Everything runs away from you. The odds of keeping it on that top shelf? I don’t know if you can tell on TV but it goes up, down, left to right. It’s such a hard shot. I hit it so well it looked like it wasn’t hard.
“That was the chip that got me settled in that all right, I can do this.”
PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Thomas was in a three-hole playoff at Southern Hills with Will Zalatoris, both opening with birdie on the par-5 13th. Next was the reachable par-4 17th, with a creek to the right that meanders in front of the green.
“I hit it in the left bunker in regulation, so I knew that had to be my miss,” he said. “I aimed at the left bunker, cut it to the second one, and if the wind wants to take that up the gap, great. As soon as it came off, it was a perfect shot.”
It found the green for a two-putt birdie and one-shot lead, and he won with a par on 18.
The meaningful shot cleaned up a mess from the day before.
Thomas was sliding from contention with each of the five bogeys he made through 15 holes, one of them on the par-5 13th. The 16th hole looked like another when he drove into the rough, had to chip out and hit a pedestrian wedge to 25 feet.
“I was leaking oil, playing bad. It was really rough,” Thomas said. “I hit a poor wedge to 25 or 30 feet and made that for par, and I birdied 17. I bogey that hole and don’t birdie 17, it’s over.”
U.S. OPEN
“The one thing I’ve been really struggling with this year is fairway bunker play,” Matt Fitzpatrick said after winning at Brookline.
That’s what led to his first major. He had a one-shot lead when he drove into the bunker left of the 18th fairway. With the steep lip, it looked like his safest option was short of the green. He hit a “squeezy fade” from 156 yards with a 9-iron to 18 feet for par.
“It was just kind of natural ability took over and just played the shot that was at hand, if I was a junior trying to hit it close,” Fitzpatrick shot.
Three holes earlier, he hit a 5-iron out of the rough on the 15th that led to birdie. But it was another birdie, even more unlikely, that stands out to him.
“The putt on 13,” he said. “It was 50 feet. For whatever reason, I genuinely felt good over the putt. I felt like I had a chance, and you don’t often get that. I’ve had it multiple times over 10-footers and 20-footers. That one … I felt good over it.”
As for the timing? He had missed a 6-foot par putt on No. 10. He three-putted from 15 feet on the par-3 11th, falling two shots behind. And then he dropped the big one.
“It just changed the momentum for me,” he said.
BRITISH OPEN
Imagine leading the 150th Open at St. Andrews by one shot on the 17th hole, 40 yards away with the notorious Road Hole bunker between you and the pin.
“It was pretty daunting,” Cameron Smith said. “I hit a great putt. I figured somewhere on the putting surface I’d have a good look at par.”
The danger was losing pace if it started too close to the edge and funneling into the pot bunker. The pace was perfect and settled 10 feet away. Smith made everything on Sunday, and that par putt was no exception.
“I was trying to hit it to a certain spot on the green and trying not to think of the big bunker that was staring me right in the face,” he said. “That’s probably the one shot on the back nine where if it goes pear-shaped, we’re not talking.”
He made five straight birdies in that closing 64. But when asked for a meaningful shot, he thought back to the second round, a 3-wood into the par-5 14th for an eagle.
“My favorite shot of the week,” he said. “I had to take a little off a 3-wood and hold it off the breeze, and it turned out perfect.”
It told him the long game was in top form. The short game never seems to leave him.
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Watch the draw for the 2023 PDC World Darts Championship live on Sky Sports News and the Sky Sports Darts YouTube channel on Monday – Beau Greaves, Fallon Sherrock and Lisa Ashton will discover their first-round opponents; Peter Wright is defending champion
Last Updated: 24/11/22 7:31pm
Lisa Ashton, Beau Greaves and Fallon Sherrock will find out their opponents in the first round of the 2023 PDC World Darts Championship
Beau Greaves, Fallon Sherrock and more will discover their Alexandra Palace fate when the draw for the 2023 PDC World Darts Championship takes place live on Sky Sports News and the Sky Sports Darts YouTube channel on Monday evening.
Tune in from 6.25pm as Wayne Mardle and Mark Webster draw the names for the biggest tournament in the sport, which runs from December 15 to January 3 live exclusively on Sky Sports.
There will be three women’s players in this winter’s competition with teenage sensation Beau Greaves and Lisa Ashton taking their spots from the Women’s Series Order of Merit and Fallon Sherrock awarded a place by virtue of winning the inaugural Women’s World Matchplay in July.
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On the latest episode of Love The Darts, Devon Petersen and Michael Bridge discuss whether Sherrock deserves her place at the 2023 World Championship
On the latest episode of Love The Darts, Devon Petersen and Michael Bridge discuss whether Sherrock deserves her place at the 2023 World Championship
Greaves, 18, has been in sparkling form in the Women’s Series, clinching second spot in the Order of Merit with seven consecutive event wins, and the reigning WDF Lakeside Women’s World Champion could be a real threat at Alexandra Palace.
Greaves, Sherrock and Ashton will enter at the first-round stage alongside the likes of Steve Beaton, Adrian Lewis and Josh Rock, with the top 32 on the PDC Order of Merit, including world No 1 Gerwyn Price, defending champion Peter Wright, Michael van Gerwen, Grand Slam champion Michael Smith and a revitalised Raymond van Barneveld, playing from round two.
Wright beat Smith 7-5 in last season’s World Championship final to win the title for the second time in his career, having also triumphed in 2020 with a 7-3 success over Van Gerwen.
There were three nine-dart finishes in the 2022 tournament with Price, Darius Labanauskas and William Borland pulling off the feat.
Watch the 2023 PDC World Darts Championship live on Sky Sports from December 15 to January 3.
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Jamie Carragher claims the departure of sporting director Julian Ward is a worry for Liverpool and the uncertainty surrounding the club is a concern in terms of recruitment.
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Melissa Reddy reports on the news that both Manchester United and Liverpool are considering new investment and the potential of an outright sale, at the same time.
Adam Svensson became a first-time winner on Tour on Sunday and was victorious at the RSM Classic in his 70th career start; Svensson is the second Canadian to win on Tour this season, joining Mackenzie Hughes
Last Updated: 20/11/22 11:53pm
Adam Svensson celebrates his first PGA TOUR victory
Adam Svensson closed out with a six-under 64 to win the RSM Classic on Sunday at Sea Island for his first PGA Tour victory.
Svensson, a 28-year-old Canadian, was locked in a four-way tie for the lead on the closing stretch of the Seaside course when he produced an 18-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, and then hit a tee shot to 10 feet on the par-three 17th for a birdie to give himself a cushion.
Brian Harman (65) and Sahith Theegala (66) were in the group ahead of him and missed birdie chances on the closing hole.
Callum Tarren (64) was the first to post at 17-under par and was hopeful of a play-off. Svensson capped off his bogey-free final round with a par for a two-shot win.
Svensson is starting his third full year on the PGA Tour and gets a two-year exemption, along with a trip to the Masters and the PGA Championship. He has never played a major.
“To be honest, it’s not even real right now,” Svensson said.
“I’m so happy. I put so much work in. To win on the PGA Tour means everything to be me. I just kept believing in myself, and here I am.”
Svensson is the second Canadian to win on Tour this season, joining Mackenzie Hughes, who won in Mississippi.
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Theegala recovered from a double bogey on the par-five seventh hole when he was in trouble left off the tee and then hit a chip that came back to him from behind the green. He made five birdies over the last 11 holes.
Harman got in the game late, hitting a fairway metal on the par-5 15th hole that was inches away from rolling in, setting up a short eagle. He birdied the 16th to share the lead, but had to settle for pars on the final two holes.
Patrick Rodgers and Ben Martin, who shared the 54-hole lead, couldn’t keep up. Rodgers didn’t make his first birdie until the 13th hole and closed with a 70 to tie for 10th, while Martin shot a 72.
Cole Hammer, who graduated from Texas in May and was playing on a sponsor exemption, shot a 65 to tie for fifth, which gets him into the Sony Open.
The PGA Tour now takes a six-week break in the final wraparound season before resuming with the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua the first week of January.
By winning, Svensson was the last man to qualify for that field, the first elevated event that will have a $15 million purse. Svensson won $1,458,000, more than he won in either of his two previous seasons on the PGA Tour.
Maguire had four-straight birdies around the turn and added another pair late on to join Lydia Ko on 15-under in pursuit of $2 million prize pot; Watch the final round live on Sunday from 7pm on Sky Sports Golf and – for free – on the Sky Sports Golf YouTube channel
Last Updated: 19/11/22 11:23pm
Ireland’s Leona Maguire has a share of the lead heading into the final round of the CME Group Tour Championship in Florida
Leona Maguire of Ireland carded a nine-under 63, allowing her to catch Lydia Ko for a share of the lead after three rounds of the CME Group Tour Championship in Florida and set up a thrilling final-day duel for the richest prize in women’s golf.
Maguire, one of 11 first-time winners on the LPGA Tour this year, had four-straight birdies around the turn and added another pair late on in her stunning round that has catapulted her into contention for the $2 million prize pot at Tiburon Golf Club.
Her main contender for the cash, Ko, had a five-shot lead to start the third round – seven shots ahead of Maguire – but a mixture of birdies and bogeys stalled her round. She fell one shot behind Maguire at one stage until chipping to tap-in range on the par-five 17th on her way to a round of 70.
The forecast for Sunday’s final round is for rain and 20 mph gusts of wind. “Nothing I’m not used to from Ireland,” Maguire said when she finished her round.
“Ultimately just got to go out and play as well as I possibly can, and especially if there’s bad weather, that’s all you can control. Looking forward to one last walk of the season tomorrow.”
Maguire and Ko have a five-shot advantage over former US Women’s Open champion, Korea’s Jeon-Geun Lee, and Scotland’s Gemma Dryburgh.
Elsewhere, Brooke Henderson kept her slim hopes alive for player of the year. The Canadian, who had to withdraw last week with a back injury, had two eagles in her round of 65 and was at nine-under, six behind the leaders.
Henderson will have to win the CME Group Tour Championship and have Ko finish third or worse to win player of the year.
Watch the final round of the LPGA Tour’s CME Group Tour Championship on Sunday from 7pm, live on Sky Sports Golf and – for free – on the Sky Sports Golf YouTube channel.
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World’s best female golfers to compete for more than $100 million in official prize money in 2023, the highest total in LPGA Tour history; Global schedule kicks off on January 19 and runs until late November
Last Updated: 18/11/22 4:58pm
Atthaya Thitikul and Nelly Korda will be among the LPGA Tour stars benefitting from record-breaking prize money in 2023
LPGA Tour players will compete for over $100 million for the first time as part of a record-breaking 2023 schedule.
The LPGA Tour announced that their global calendar will comprise of 33 events across 12 countries, with a total prize fund of $101.4m (£85m) up for grabs.
Combined purses are more than double what was paid out on the tour just a decade ago, with the five women’s golf majors accounting for $37.9m of the total prize money, while every tournament carries a purse of at least $1.5m.
World No 1 Nelly Korda will feature heavily on the LPGA Tour’s 2023 schedule
“Because of our athletes, partners, volunteers and incredible fans, 2023 will be a banner year for the LPGA Tour,” said LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan. “The schedule features new events, elevated purses, unique formats and world-class golf courses.
“Our athletes are playing for more total prize money than any time in history, and we have over 500 hours of broadcast television. All those things combine to make the LPGA the leading women’s professional sports property in the world.
England’s Charley Hull was among the winners on the LPGA Tour in 2022
“The LPGA Tour has never had better or more committed partners who see the commercial value in investing in women’s sports and who understand how their partnerships elevate women and girls on and off the golf course.”
The 2023 schedule includes the Hanwha LifePlus International Crown, a team match-play competition that showcases golfers from the top eight countries in the globe, while Team Europe will chase a third consecutive victory over Team USA in the Solheim Cup next September.
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With a year to go until the 2023 Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin, Spain – Trish Johnson and Henni Koyack predict who may feature for Team Europe next September.
With a year to go until the 2023 Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin, Spain – Trish Johnson and Henni Koyack predict who may feature for Team Europe next September.
The Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions kicks off the season from January 19-22, with the season running until the CME Group Tour Championship in Florida from November 16-19.
When are the women’s majors in 2023?
April 20-23 – The Chevron Championship – The Club at Carlton Woods, The Woodlands, Texas
June 22-25 – KPMG Women’s PGA Championship – Baltusrol G.C. (Lower Course), Springfield, New Jersey
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November 20, 2022, 6:00pm
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July 6-9 – US Women’s Open presented by ProMedica – Pebble Beach Golf Links, Pebble Beach, California
July 27-30 – Amundi Evian Championship – Evian Resort G.C., Evian-les-Bains, France
August 10-13 – AIG Women’s Open – Walton Heath (Old Course), Surrey, England
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Highlights from day four of the AIG Women’s Open at Muirfield.
Highlights from day four of the AIG Women’s Open at Muirfield.
Other key dates on 2023 schedule
May 4-7 – Hanwha LifePlus International Crown – TPC Harding Park, San Francisco, California
August 3-6 – Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open – Dundonald Links, Ayrshire, Scotland
September 22-24 – Solheim Cup – Finca Cortesin, Andalucia, Spain
November 16-19 – CME Group Tour Championship – Tiburon G.C., Naples, Florida
“If I’m holding the trophy, holding all the trophies or no trophy…I just want to have a good week. These opportunities don’t come along very often. I want to try to grab it when it’s there” – Lydia Ko, who leads the LPGA CME Group Tour Championship by a shot
Last Updated: 18/11/22 12:02am
Lydia Ko of New Zealand leads the CME Group Tour Championship
Lydia Ko began her quest for the largest prize in women’s golf history by hitting a tree and making bogey on a par-five, but the rest of Thursday in the LPGA CME Group Tour Championship could not have gone better.
New Zealander Ko responded with eight birdies, including four in a row late in the round at Tiburon Golf Club, that sent her to a seven-under 65 and a one-shot lead in the LPGA Tour season finale.
So much is at stake this week, even beyond the $2m prize to the winner.
Ko has a one-point lead in the race for LPGA Tour player of the year, while she looks set to win the Vare Trophy for the lowest scoring average. Both are worth a point in her bid to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame.
“If I’m holding the trophy, holding all the trophies or no trophy…I just want to have a good week,” Ko said. “These opportunities don’t come along very often. I want to try to grab it when it’s there.”
It is all right in front of Ko, who has two wins in what she considers her most consistent year on the LPGA Tour. And right behind are plenty of challengers.
Danielle Kang and Pajaree Anannarukarn of Thailand are just behind Ko after carding 66s, Gemma Dryburgh of Scotland and Hyo Joo Kim of South Korea fired 67s and Nelly Korda and Brooke Henderson were in the group with 68s.
Korda missed four months earlier this year because of surgery for a blood clot in her left arm. She finally is back to full strength, and her victory last week up the coast at Pelican Golf Club allowed her to return to No 1 in the women’s world ranking.
Henderson had to withdraw last week with back pain, and the Canadian was not even sure she would be able to play. But she made an adjustment in her swing, and it allowed her to get around Tiburon with a respectable 68.
Henderson has an outside shot at player of the year, though she would have to win and have Ko and Minjee Lee finish third or worse.
Lee, who has already set an LPGA Tour record with $3.7m in earnings this season, opened with a 71. Atthaya Thitikul of Thailand, the 19-year-old who reached No 1 in the world until Korda took it back, had a 73.
Ko could only laugh at her start of the tournament by hitting a tree.
“It’s almost like I had two tee shots,” she said. “Even though I bogeyed a par-five, I knew plenty of holes were going to play downwind. I tried not to get too frustrated. The first four holes into the wind are a beast. I knew if I could hang on and be patient, there would be a lot of opportunities.
“I was able to grab a lot of them on the back nine.”
And that started with a par. She was quick on a chip from just off the 13th green and watched it run some 12 feet by the hole. Ko made the par putt, and she was off and running, making four straight birdies. It helped that two were par-fives.
Korda gave up an easy birdie chance on the par-five 17th when she drove it so long she had only 159 yards left. But she came up well short and failed to get up-and-down. That was a product of what she referred to as getting fooled too often by the end.
Korda had a chance at all the awards last year until Jin Young Ko beat her, making it the third straight year the South Korean star had won at Tiburon.
Making it four in a row will be difficult. Jin Young Ko opened with a 72 as she continues to deal with an ailing left wrist.
Watch the CME Group Tour Championship throughout the week live on Sky Sports. Live coverage continues Friday from 7pm live on Sky Sports Golf and – for free – on the Sky Sports Golf YouTube channel.