Rahm in position for second LIV Golf title; Ripper GC ahead by 1

Rahm in position for second LIV Golf title; Ripper GC ahead by 1
Captain Jon Rahm of Legion XIII lines up a putt on the 14th green during the second round of LIV Golf Greenbrier at The Old White at The Greenbrier on Saturday in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. (Scott Taetsch/LIV Golf)
Short Url
Updated 18 August 2024
Follow

Rahm in position for second LIV Golf title; Ripper GC ahead by 1

Rahm in position for second LIV Golf title; Ripper GC ahead by 1
  • Rahm climbed atop the LIV Golf Greenbrier leaderboard Saturday after a second-round 8-under 62
  • The all-Australian Ripper GC took the team lead by shooting 20 under, thanks to 63s by Cameron Smith and Lucas Herbert and a 64 by Marc Leishman

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Virginia: Jon Rahm has been pursuing LIV Golf individual points leader Joaquin Niemann all season.

The Legion XIII captain is now 18 holes away from catching him.

Rahm climbed atop the LIV Golf Greenbrier leaderboard Saturday after a second-round 8-under 62. At 14 under, he leads by two shots entering the final round of what promises to be a shootout in favorable scoring conditions at The Old White course.

The all-Australian Ripper GC took the team lead by shooting 20 under, thanks to 63s by Cameron Smith and Lucas Herbert and a 64 by Marc Leishman. At 36 under, they lead Smash GC by one shot and Legion XIII by six in chase of their third victory of the season.

Rahm’s Legion XIII won four team titles this year, but Rahm didn’t post his first individual victory until the most recent LIV Golf tournament in the UK.

If Rahm posts a second consecutive victory Sunday, it will guarantee that the individual championship will be decided next month at LIV Golf Chicago in the regular season finale.

“It would be pretty special,” said Rahm, who entered the week in second place in the standings, 24 points behind Niemann. “I’ve been playing good all year, and Joaquin has been playing fantastic golf all year. To give him a run for his money is good, but hopefully I can get the job done tomorrow and we have a nice little tight race going into Chicago.”

Even if Rahm doesn’t win, he’s played well enough that Niemann likely will not be able to clinch in Greenbrier without a miracle result. The Torque captain is tied for 20th at 6 under.

Rahm’s primary focus on Sunday will be simply to hold off all the challengers on a course that gives up low scores. Last year, Bryson DeChambeau won by shooting 58 in the final round. So far, there have been eight rounds of 63 or lower shot this week, with Rahm’s 62 the lowest.

“I wouldn’t be expecting somebody to shoot in the 50s every single competitive year we have,” said Rahm, who has now shot 8-under rounds five times since joining LIV Golf in the offseason.

“It’s almost happened the last three, four years, but I wouldn’t be expecting it as often as we’ve had it the last few years. I think we’ve been very spoiled in that sense.

“With that said, I hope that someone is me. If I were to do it tomorrow, it would be very nice, do it in Bryson fashion and get a W with a round in the 50s.”

Joining Rahm in the final group is the Smash duo of captain Brooks Koepka, the only four-time LIV Golf winner, and Talor Gooch, the 2023 individual champion.

Both players are at 12 under. Herbert and Cleeks GC’s Richard Bland, who won two senior majors this season, are also at 12 under. Four other players are tied for six at 11 under — Smith, Leishman, Smash’s Jason Kokrak and Torque’s Sebastián Muñoz.

DeChambeau won last year at 23 under, and Bland thinks the target score on Sunday is 20 under. That means a lot of players will be firing at a lot of pins.

“I was pretty much in this position, I think, last year, come from behind going into Sunday and Bryson goes and shoots 58,” Bland said. “I think I shot 65, and you’re just picking up his scraps. But all you can do is go out and shoot the best score you can, and hopefully, the last four or five holes you’ve got a say in the tournament. That’s all you can ask for.”

Said Rahm: “I’m going to need a low one. No lead is safe.”

TEAM COUNTING SCORES

Standings and counting scores for Saturday’s second round:

1. RIPPER GC -36 (Herbert 63, Smith 63, Leishman 64; Rd. 2 score: -20)

2. SMASH GC -35 (Koepka 64, Gooch 65, Kokrak 66; Rd. 2 score: -15)

3. LEGION XIII -30 (Rahm 62, Hatton 67, Surratt 67; Rd. 2 score: -14)

4. TORQUE GC -28 (Ortiz 65, Pereira 65, Muñoz 66; Rd. 2 score: -14)

5. FIREBALLS GC -27 (Garcia 63, Ancer 64, Puig 65; Rd. 2 score: -18)

6. IRON HEADS GC -20 (Lee 66, Kozuma 67, Vincent 68; Rd. 2 score: -9)

T7. CRUSHERS GC -19 (Howell III 64, DeChambeau 65, Casey 66; Rd. 2 score: -15)

T7. HYFLYERS GC -19 (Ogletree 66, Steele 66, Tringale 67; Rd. 2 score: -11)

9. RANGEGOATS GC -18 (Watson 63, Pieters 65, Uihlein 67; Rd. 2 score: -15)

10. CLEEKS GC -16 (Bland 64, Kaymer 70, Samooja 72; Rd. 2 score: -4)

11. STINGER GC -13 (Oosthuizen 66, Schwartzel 67, Burmester 68; Rd. 2 score: -9)

12. 4ACES GC -10 (Reed 66, Johnson 67, Perez 69; Rd. 2 score: -8)

13. MAJESTICKS GC -9 (Campbell 65, Stenson 68, Westwood 72; Rd. 2 score: -5)


Strong field set for season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai

Strong field set for season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai
Updated 12 October 2024
Follow

Strong field set for season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai

Strong field set for season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai
  • Major champions Shane Lowry, Justin Rose and Adam Scott will tee off at at Jumeirah Golf Estates from Nov. 14-17

DUBAI: The 2024 Race to Dubai is set for a thrilling conclusion, with a host of global stars already confirmed for the season-ending DP World Tour Championship at Jumeirah Golf Estates from Nov. 14-17.

Billy Horschel, who recently claimed his second BMW PGA Championship title, will tee off on the Earth Course alongside major champions Shane Lowry, Justin Rose, and Adam Scott, and fellow Rolex Series winner Robert MacIntyre, who won the Genesis Scottish Open in July.

They join reigning Race to Dubai champion Rory McIlroy and his fellow Ryder Cup star and 2017 European No. 1 Tommy Fleetwood, with both already confirmed for the final Rolex Series event of the season.

Horschel’s victory at Wentworth saw him move up to third on the Race to Dubai Rankings in Partnership with Rolex, and the American will be making his second appearance in the season-ending event.

The 37-year-old won the PGA Tour’s FedExCup in 2014 after claiming the BMW Championship and Tour Championship titles in back-to-back weeks, and the eight-time PGA Tour winner is excited by the opportunity to win the DP World Tour’s season-ending title.

“I’m excited to return to Dubai next month to finish my season,” said Horschel. “I really enjoyed my experience at Jumeirah Golf Estates three years ago and I’m looking forward to getting back to the UAE.

“It has been great playing in some of the DP World Tour’s most historic events in the latter part of the season and I hope to finish the year on a high note with another memorable experience in Dubai.

“I’m incredibly proud to have won the Tour Championship on the PGA Tour, so to have a chance to add the DP World Tour Championship title to my trophy cabinet would certainly be very special.”

Horschel finished joint runner-up at the 152nd Open at Royal Troon alongside Justin Rose, who has also confirmed his return to the DP World Tour Championship. Joining them in the field is Australian Adam Scott, who won the Masters Tournament in 2013, the same year that Rose won the US Open at Merion.

Fellow major champion Lowry will be competing in back-to-back weeks in the UAE, after also confirming his appearance at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. The Irishman, who won the 148th Open at Royal Portrush in 2019, has recorded 13 top 20 worldwide finishes in 2024, including a victory at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on the PGA Tour alongside McIlroy.

Scotsman MacIntyre is enjoying a career-best season a year on from making his Ryder Cup debut at Marco Simone, having won both the RBC Canadian Open and his home Genesis Scottish Open in 2024.

The 28-year-old is currently sixth on the Race to Dubai Rankings and is hoping to eclipse his previous highest finish of ninth on the season-long standings, which he achieved in 2019.


Europe skipper Donald in talks with Garcia over Ryder Cup return

Europe skipper Donald in talks with Garcia over Ryder Cup return
Updated 09 October 2024
Follow

Europe skipper Donald in talks with Garcia over Ryder Cup return

Europe skipper Donald in talks with Garcia over Ryder Cup return
  • Garcia, the all-time leading Ryder Cup scorer with 28.5 points in 10 appearances, missed last year’s tournament in Rome after opting to join the Saudi-backed LIV Golf circuit
  • Donald said existing regulations meant other LIV players could also be available as captain’s picks
  • US officials have already given the green light for LIV players to play on the American team, as they did in 2023

NEW YORK: Europe Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald revealed on Tuesday he has been in talks with LIV Golf player Sergio Garcia about making a possible return to the team for next year’s clash with the USA.

Speaking at an event in New York to mark the countdown to next year’s Europe-USA Ryder Cup showdown at Bethpage, Donald confirmed he had spoken to Garcia about his availability.

Garcia, the all-time leading Ryder Cup scorer with 28.5 points in 10 appearances, missed last year’s tournament in Rome after opting to join the Saudi-backed LIV Golf circuit.

However, Donald said on Tuesday that Garcia was now considering applying to rejoin the DP World Tour in a push to be eligible for selection.

“Obviously he resigned his membership a couple years ago,” Donald said of Garcia.

“But we have had some chats. He’s considering rejoining. He’d have to follow all the rules and regulations like everyone else, and if he does that, again, he will be eligible to partake in the Ryder Cup.

“We chatted on phone a couple weeks ago. He’s certainly very interested in doing that. He understands everything that’s involved, and again, the decision has to go to him, whether he’s prepared to do all that.

“But certainly, we’ve had that discussion, yes.”

Donald said existing regulations meant other LIV players could also be available as captain’s picks.

“The DP World Tour’s policies have been very consistent. There’s been a lot of clarity around that,” Donald said.

“It’s really the same as it was in Rome. You have to be a Member of The European Tour and born in Europe. If you fulfill the regulations and the rules that the DP World Tour set, then you’re eligible. There’s a bunch of LIV guys that play on LIV that they are eligible now; so I can pick them at will.”

US officials have already given the green light for LIV players to play on the American team, as they did in 2023 when Brooks Koepka was given a captain’s pick to join the team.

US captain Keegan Bradley said Tuesday he planned to select “the 12 best players.”

“So if we feel like there’s a few guys there, one guy, two guys, whatever it is, then we’re going to do that,” Bradley said.

“But we’re too far out to figure out how this is all going to play out. But we’re definitely going to take the 12 best players however that shakes out.”

The 2025 Ryder Cup takes place at Bethpage Black in New York from Sept. 26-28. Defending champions Europe are chasing their first victory in the tournament on US soil since the famous “Miracle at Medinah” in 2012.


Shane Lowry looking forward to Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship return

Shane Lowry looking forward to Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship return
Updated 08 October 2024
Follow

Shane Lowry looking forward to Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship return

Shane Lowry looking forward to Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship return
  • Former champion to take part in first event of the DP World Tour Play-Offs from Nov. 7-10

ABU DHABI: Former champion Shane Lowry is excited to return to the UAE for the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship, the first event of the DP World Tour Play-Offs taking place from Nov. 7 to 10.

The Irishman claimed the famous Falcon Trophy in 2019 just six months before becoming a Major champion, winning the Claret Jug at The 148th Open.

Lowry will join fellow Major winners Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose and Adam Scott, as well as Ryder Cup teammate Tommy Fleetwood, in the field for the fourth Rolex Series event of the season at Yas Links.

The 37-year-old has enjoyed an excellent 2024 campaign, recording 13 top-20 worldwide finishes, including sixth-placed results at both The 152nd Open and US PGA Championship.

In addition, he partnered McIlroy to victory at the PGA TOUR’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

“I’m excited to end my season in the UAE, starting with the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship at Yas Links,” said Lowry. “It’s always nice to return to a part of the world where you have had success in the past, and I hope to end the year on a high.”

As part of the season-ending DP World Tour Play-Offs, the championship will have the top 70 available players from the Race to Dubai Rankings in Partnership with Rolex at the conclusion of the “Back 9.”

The top 50 players at the end of the week will then advance to the season-ending DP World Tour Championship.

Also confirmed for the championship are Genesis Scottish Open champion Robert MacIntyre, who also represented Europe at the 2023 Ryder Cup, and Thriston Lawrence, currently ranked second on the Race to Dubai Rankings.


Kevin Yu birdies 18th twice and wins Sanderson Farms in playoff for first PGA Tour title

Kevin Yu birdies 18th twice and wins Sanderson Farms in playoff for first PGA Tour title
Updated 07 October 2024
Follow

Kevin Yu birdies 18th twice and wins Sanderson Farms in playoff for first PGA Tour title

Kevin Yu birdies 18th twice and wins Sanderson Farms in playoff for first PGA Tour title
  • Kevin Yu: I’ve been dreaming this moment since I was 5
  • Yu hit his winning putt, a victory that sends him to the Masters and the PGA Championship for the first time

JACKSON, Mississippi: Kevin Yu made a 15-foot birdie on the 18th hole for a 5-under 67, and he birdied it again from 6 feet in a playoff to beat Beau Hossler and win the Sanderson Farms Championship on Sunday for his first PGA Tour title.

Yu was nearly forgotten for most of a final round that appeared to be a duel between Hossler and Keith Mitchell until the 26-year-old from Taiwan made a birdie to tie them for the lead.

Hossler pulled his drive on the 18th in regulation behind a tree, had to pitch out and hit his third shot to 4 feet to save par. Mitchell had a 35-foot birdie putt to win it and it grazed the left edge of the cup. But he missed the 4-foot comebacker for par, shot 70 and missed the playoff.

Mitchell tied for third with former US Open champion Lucas Glover, who played the last six holes in 5-under par — including pitching in for eagle on the par-4 15th — for a 66.

Hossler again was left off the tee on the 18th in the playoff. Yu hit first and sent his approach to 6 feet right of the hole. Hossler had to punch below the trees, and it turned too much and went into a front bunker. He blasted out to 2 feet to secure par.

Yu hit his winning putt, a victory that sends him to the Masters and the PGA Championship for the first time. He also will start his season at Kapalua for The Sentry, a gathering of PGA Tour winners in 2024.

“I’ve been dreaming this moment since I was 5,” Yu said. “This is the dream for all golfers, to win on the PGA Tour. I did it today. I’m thankful for my parents. Without them, I couldn’t have done that.”

Yu and Hossler, who shot a 68, finished at 23-under 265.

This was Hossler’s 200th start on the PGA Tour without ever winning — four of them as an amateur — and it was as close as any. He fell back with a pair of bogeys early on the back nine as he tried to keep pace with Mitchell, and he pulled into a share of the lead with a 20-foot birdie on the 17th hole.

But he never gave himself a good look on the 18th or in the playoff.

“Even though I didn’t have my best stuff on the back nine I grinded really hard,” Hossler said “Hit some really quality shots under the gun, and that’s all you can do. Obviously, Kevin played a beautiful hole in the playoff.”

Mitchell might have the most regrets in search of his first win in five years. He was two shots ahead with five to play when he failed to birdie the par-5 14th or the reachable par-4 15th. He still had a putt to win, and that’s where it all went wrong with a three-putt bogey.

“The first putt actually looked good off the face. Right when it missed, I kind of turned my head and didn’t watch the read on the way by,” Mitchell said. “I assumed it was breaking — guess it broke left. It was going to break right back up the hill.”

He played the 4-foot par putt inside the left edge and it stayed out to the left.

“I hate that I finished with a three-putt,” Mitchell said. “Felt like I grinded all the way to the end and gave the first putt a really good chance.”


Celine Boutier clinches Aramco Team Series title with 19-under-par finish in China

Celine Boutier clinches Aramco Team Series title with 19-under-par finish in China
Updated 06 October 2024
Follow

Celine Boutier clinches Aramco Team Series title with 19-under-par finish in China

Celine Boutier clinches Aramco Team Series title with 19-under-par finish in China
  • French golfer secures her first title of the year

LONDON: France’s Celine Boutier secured her first title of the year, delivering a 19-under-par performance to win the Aramco Team Series event at Mission Hills, China.

Boutier, who began the final day tied for the lead with home favorite Xiyu Lin, carded a bogey-free round for the second consecutive day to claim victory.

She said: “It was a great round. I definitely feel like we started really hot with (Lin), so it was fun to be able to battle it out. I’m very happy with my round (but) I wish a few putts had dropped. I was honestly super happy with how I handled today.”

Boutier acknowledged the intensity of the competition, adding: “It was close the whole day. One or two shots can swing pretty fast after one hole or two, so you definitely have to be on your toes until the end. I’m super happy with the way I played the last few holes.”

She also expressed her enthusiasm for China, saying: “I feel pretty good. I like China, so hopefully I can win some more tournaments here.”

Lin had a huge following while playing in front of her home crowd for the first time since winning bronze in Paris. (Supplied/Aramco Team Series)

Lin, playing in front of her home crowd for the first time since winning bronze in Paris, finished just two strokes behind Boutier at 17-under-par.

Despite the loss, Lin praised Boutier’s performance, saying: “Celine played unbelievably; a 7-under round and bogey-free is hard to beat, especially when my putter is not on. When I got to 18, I was two shots behind, so I knew I had a very slim chance.”

However, she remained optimistic, and added: “I had to give it 100 percent. I hit a good drive and probably one of the best 3-woods I made all week. It’s nice; I came up just short, but hearing the crowds cheering for me was pretty unbelievable.”

The battle for third place saw Shenzhen’s winning team captain, Chiara Tamburlini, and three-time winner Pauline Roussin-Bouchard finish tied, both recording the lowest rounds of the tournament at 65.

Roussin-Bouchard made a late charge with an eagle on the 16th hole, while Tamburlini fell just three strokes short of becoming the first player to win both the team and individual titles in the same event.

Noah Alireza, CEO of Golf Saudi, said: “What an incredible show of golf we experienced this weekend at the Aramco Team Series’ first visit to Shenzhen.

“On behalf of the Golf Saudi team, we extend a heartfelt congratulations to our exceptional winners, who continue to raise the standard of excellence in golf, inspiring players and fans worldwide.”