Patrick Newcomb holds on to lead heading into weekend in Edmonton
Murray, Kentucky’s Patrick Newcomb shot a 2-under 68 on Friday at Windermere Golf and Country Club to take a one-stroke lead through two rounds of the Syncrude Oil Country Championship presented by AECON, the seventh event of the 2017 Mackenzie Tour – PGA TOUR Canada season.
The 27-year old led by one over Tacoma, Washington’s Derek Barron when play was suspended for the evening due to darkness at 8:35 p.m. Round Two was suspended initially for 1 hour and 54 minutes due to dangerous weather earlier in the day and will resume at 8 a.m. on Saturday morning.
“I’m really happy at 10-under,” said Newcomb, who managed six birdies on the day but admitted he would aim to improve on his total of four bogeys on the day. “I’m going to try to keep the bogeys off the card. If I can do that, I don’t see myself making any less than five or six birdies again, so that’s the key.”
The Murray State grad sits eighth on the PGA TOUR Latinoamérica Order of Merit thanks to a win at the Honduras Open presented by Indura Beach and Golf Resort, and hopes to make up for a slip-up earlier this season at the Staal Foundation Open presented by Tbaytel, where he held the solo lead on Sunday but fell to a final round 79 to fall out of contention.
“Thunder Bay got away from me a little bit. That’s the only time I’ve really fallen apart on the back nine, but that’s kind of my nature. When you’re playing aggressive and it’s not going great, if you hit a few loose tee shots hitting drivers where no one else is, it’s going to get away from you. I’m just going to keep playing aggressive and give myself a chance to win,” said Newcomb.
Barron birdied his final hole of the day to hold solo second at 9-under, while Tampa, Florida’s Lee McCoy was a shot further behind at 8-under after a 67. Barron, a 32-year old Mackenzie Tour rookie, said he looked forward to the chance to play with Newcomb on Saturday once Round 3 gets underway.
“I met him this week playing a practice round. Funny guy, nice guy. I really enjoyed playing with him, and I’m sure he’ll keep it lighthearted tomorrow,” said Barron.
BACKGROUND ON THE LEADER: 27-year old Patrick Newcomb is making his fourth career start on the Mackenzie Tour and is playing out of a category for members of PGA TOUR Latinoamérica, where he ranks eighth on the Order of Merit thanks to a win at the Honduras Open presented by Indura Beach and Golf Resort.
Newcomb played college golf at Murray State, where he collected nine individual victories. He co-held the lead at the Staal Foundation Open presented by Tbaytel through 54 holes but fell to a final round 79 and finished T38.
Newcomb matched the Windermere Golf and Country Club Course Record with an 8-under 62 on Saturday, matching Joe Panzeri and Matt Marshall at the 2012 ATB Financial Classic. The course played as a par-71 in 2012.
Newcomb’s caddie this week is Windermere member Dave Kakoschke.
Werenski eagles No. 18 for 2 point lead in Reno
RENO, Nev. – Richy Werenski birdied six holes and eagled No. 18 on Friday to take a two-point lead in the Barracuda Championship, the PGA Tour’s only modified Stableford scoring event.
The 25-year-old American had a 15-point round to reach 26 points for two trips around the high-altitude course at Montreux Golf and Country Club.
The scoring system awards eight points for double eagle, five points for an eagle, two points for a birdie and deducts a point for a bogey and three points for a double bogey or worse.
Stuart Appleby sits alone in second after a six-birdie, two-bogey round. Greg Owen, Luke List, Ben Martin and Dicky Pride are all tied for third at 23 points. First-round leader John Huh had two birdies and two bogeys to drop into a tie for 19th with 16 points.
David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., was tied for 28th at 15 points, while Ottawa’s Brad Fritsch and Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., were in a group tied for 60th at 10 points.
Play was delayed for over an hour due to rain and lightning in the area.
Walker managing fatigue, builds 2 shot lead at Firestone; Hadwin T6
AKRON, Ohio – The sun finally came out, and Jimmy Walker saw a glimpse of what he hopes are brighter days ahead.
In a year marked by coping with Lyme disease and bouts of fatigue, Walker endured rain delays of nearly five hours Friday and posted a 5-under 65 for a two-shot lead going into the weekend at the Bridgestone Invitational.
The timing couldn’t be better for Walker, who goes to Quail Hollow next week to defend his title in the PGA Championship.
“It hadn’t been a lot of fun this year,” Walker said. “But it’s nice to see some putts go in and make some solid swings and keep rounds going, make par putts, just the stuff I haven’t been doing.”
He was at 7-under 133, two shots ahead of Thomas Pieters of Belgium, who had a 70.
Walker didn’t have a lot going last year until he finished well in the Canadian Open, and then went wire-to-wire at Baltusrol the next week to win the PGA Championship. So maybe there’s another spark he can find at Firestone Country Club.
“There’s still a lot of golf on a hard course, but I know it’s there,” he said.
He also has a slew of players not far behind him in this World Golf Championship. Rory McIlroy put together a steady round of 69 and was three shots back, along with Zach Johnson and Hideki Matsuyama, who each shot 67.
The large group at 3-under 137 included Jordan Spieth, going after his third straight victory. Spieth missed a short par putt on the 15th and was slipping behind when he faced an awkward lie from the edge of a bunker. Stumbling out of the sand backward, he nearly holed the shot and made birdie, and then he stuffed his approach to 3 feet for birdie on the 18th hole to salvage a 70.
Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., is also four shots back after a 69. Mackenzie Hughes of Dundas, Ont., shot a second straight round of 74 and is 8 over.
Jason Day, winless in nearly 15 months, also got back into the picture despite some mild back pain. He opened with three straight birdies and shot 30 on the front nine to get back near the leaders, though two bogeys on the back nine slowed him and he shot 66. He was in the group at 137.
“The front side definitely felt like 2015, 2016,” Day said, alluding to his best stretch of golf when he rose to No. 1 in the world. “I was just pouring in everything. I know that it’s still in there. I’ve just got to keep practicing hard. I know it will eventually happen.”
Day felt he was slowed by the last – and longest – of the rain delays. He returned to three-putt the 10th for a bogey and never got back any momentum.
It was like that for everyone who slogged through a 10-hour day.
The second round was delayed 45 minutes at the start, and then another 45 minutes when a small band of storms rolled through. A delayed of some 3 1/2 hours followed, making it feel like two separate rounds and one long day.
Walker still isn’t out of the woods just yet. He first thought he had mononucleosis around the Masters, and it eventually was diagnosed as Lyme’s disease. He has tried to muddle through the year when his energy allowed, though there hasn’t been a lot of practice.
And even a 65, which matched his low score of the year, wasn’t smooth sailing.
“It’s day to day,” he said. “I felt pretty good all week physically, and I wake up this morning and I’ve just got his overall flu feeling in my body. So I take some Advil, it goes away. And then during the last break, it came back, so I took some more. Now it’s gone. You just never know when it’s going to spike up.”
But he felt good enough to make birdie on both par 3s on the back nine, and drop only one shot on the round.
The scoring has been good with the rain and softer greens, and a South course that was in pristine condition to start the tournament. A strong wind arrived after the storm cleared, which kept everyone’s attention.
Only two dozen players from the 76-man field remained under par.
Among those who fell back was Dustin Johnson, the world’s No. 1 player still trying to find his form from a back injury that knocked him out of the Masters. He hit only one green in regulation on the front nine – 60 feet from the hole – and shot 40. Johnson didn’t make a single birdie in his round of 75 that knocked him 10 shots out of the lead heading into the final major of the year.
Susan Xiao wins 2017 Canadian Junior Girls Championship
54-hole leader Susan Xiao from Surrey, B.C., didn’t blink in the final round of the 2017 Canadian Junior Girls Championship at Camelot Golf and Country Club carding a 3-under-par 69 to finish with a five-stroke victory.
Xiao started the day with a one stroke lead at 2 under par and was rock solid in Friday’s final round. She started with a birdie on No. 2 – then made eight consecutive pars before three straight birdies on holes 11, 12, and 13 to build a comfortable lead over the field.
“I am so honoured to win, words can’t describe how happy I am right now,” said Xiao. “This is definitely one of the biggest wins I’ve ever had.”
A 30 minute weather delay on the 18th tee didn’t affect Xiao as she sunk a 10-foot putt for par on No. 18.
“We were walking off 17 green and they blew the horn so we had to come back. At first I was a little bit sad thinking it’s the last hole can’t we just finish but it’s better to be safe,” said a smiling Xiao from the 18th green after the closing ceremonies.
Xiao is the third straight British Columbian to win the Canadian Junior Girls Championship, following Team Canada’s Naomi Ko from Victoria in 2016 and Michelle Kim of Surrey in 2015. The 15-year-old also took home the juvenile championship for players 16-and-under.
Mary Parsons, a member of Team Canada’s Development Squad, from Delta, B.C., threatened to take the lead early in the day.
Playing in her last junior tournament she had birdie putts on No.9 and 10 that would have brought her to within a stroke of Xiao who made the turn at 3 under par. But Parsons was unable to make a charge playing the final eight holes even par.
“I could have sunk some more putts out on the course, I was inside five feet and 10 feet,” said Parsons. “But I’m really happy for Susan and everyone who played really well this week at Camelot.”
Parsons’ junior career has come to a close but the 18-year-old is looking ahead to the next chapter as she joins the Indiana University Hoosiers in the fall.
“I have one more tournament before college. I’m going to the U.S. Amateur in San Diego so I’m excited for that,” added Parsons. “Moving forward in my career it’s good to know I have the shots in my bag to succeed and I’m excited for college.”
London, Ont., native Ellie Szeryk was 2 under par through six holes and it looked like she would challenge Xiao for the title, but a bogey on No. 7 and a triple-bogey on No. 8 proved too much to recover from.
“After six holes, I thought all Susan does is hit it in the middle and on the green so I started to press,” said Szeryk. “My mental game is something I have to work on.”
Emily Zhu from Richmond Hill, Ont., finished tied for fourth at 2 over par, alongside Development Squad’s Monet Chun, also from Richmond Hill. Just 13-years-old, Zhu was in second with two holes to play before a bogey-bogey finish set her back.
With her victory Xiao earns an exemption into the 2018 Canadian Women’s Amateur Championship at Marine Drive Golf Club in Vancouver.
Click here to view the full leaderboard for the 2017 Canadian Junior Girls Championship.
| Pos | Player | Today | Thru | Total | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Susan Xiao Surrey, BC |
-3 | F | -5 | 70 | 73 | 71 | 69 | 283 |
| T2 | Mary Parsons Delta, BC |
-1 | F | E | 72 | 71 | 74 | 71 | 288 |
| T2 | Ellie Szeryk London, ON |
+1 | F | E | 71 | 71 | 73 | 73 | 288 |
| T4 | Monet Chun Richmond Hill, ON |
+1 | F | +2 | 76 | 70 | 71 | 73 | 290 |
| T4 | Emily Zhu Richmond Hill, ON |
+2 | F | +2 | 72 | 75 | 69 | 74 | 290 |
| 6 | Alisha Lau Richmond, BC |
E | F | +4 | 72 | 74 | 74 | 72 | 292 |
| T7 | Tiana Cruz Richmond Hill, ON |
-1 | F | +6 | 77 | 77 | 69 | 71 | 294 |
| T7 | Hannah Lee Surrey, BC |
+2 | F | +6 | 73 | 73 | 74 | 74 | 294 |
| T7 | Momoka Kobori New Zealand |
+3 | F | +6 | 74 | 71 | 74 | 75 | 294 |
| 10 | Céleste Dao Notre-Dame-de-L’Île-Perrot, QC |
+3 | F | +7 | 74 | 74 | 72 | 75 | 295 |
| T11 | Vivian Lee Hong Kong |
-1 | F | +8 | 73 | 79 | 73 | 71 | 296 |
| T11 | Melany Chong Mississauga, ON |
E | F | +8 | 77 | 76 | 71 | 72 | 296 |
| T13 | Victoria Liu Vancouver, BC |
E | F | +10 | 77 | 72 | 77 | 72 | 298 |
| T13 | Brigitte Thibault Rosemère, QC |
E | F | +10 | 80 | 78 | 68 | 72 | 298 |
| T15 | Esther Subin Lee Maple Ridge, BC |
+2 | F | +12 | 74 | 75 | 77 | 74 | 300 |
| T15 | Karen Zhang Richmond, BC |
+4 | F | +12 | 73 | 78 | 73 | 76 | 300 |
| T15 | Akari Hayashi Victoria, BC |
+6 | F | +12 | 75 | 76 | 71 | 78 | 300 |
| 18 | Jasmine Ly Windsor, ON |
+9 | F | +13 | 72 | 74 | 74 | 81 | 301 |
| T19 | Victoria Zheng Markham, ON |
E | F | +14 | 77 | 77 | 76 | 72 | 302 |
| T19 | Alyssa DiMarcantonio Maple, ON |
+4 | F | +14 | 75 | 77 | 74 | 76 | 302 |
| T21 | Kate (Dahye) Choi Surrey, BC |
+4 | F | +15 | 74 | 75 | 78 | 76 | 303 |
| T21 | Cassidy Laidlaw Calgary, AB |
+7 | F | +15 | 74 | 76 | 74 | 79 | 303 |
| 23 | Mathilde Denicourt St-Cesaire, QC |
+7 | F | +16 | 71 | 80 | 74 | 79 | 304 |
| 24 | Chaewon Baek Langley, BC |
+5 | F | +17 | 74 | 80 | 74 | 77 | 305 |
| 25 | Emma (Hyeji) Yang Langley, BC |
+3 | F | +18 | 75 | 80 | 76 | 75 | 306 |
| 26 | Audrey Paradis Blainville, QC |
+3 | F | +21 | 80 | 75 | 79 | 75 | 309 |
| T27 | Mu Chen (Angel) Lin Surrey, BC |
+5 | F | +23 | 78 | 76 | 80 | 77 | 311 |
| T27 | Phoebe Yue West Vancouver, BC |
+8 | F | +23 | 75 | 76 | 80 | 80 | 311 |
| T27 | Euna Han Coquitlam, BC |
+8 | F | +23 | 73 | 80 | 78 | 80 | 311 |
| T27 | Katy Rutherford Calgary, AB |
+8 | F | +23 | 79 | 73 | 79 | 80 | 311 |
| T31 | Raesa Sheikh Markham, ON |
+7 | F | +24 | 79 | 81 | 73 | 79 | 312 |
| T31 | Élizabeth Labbé Lévis, QC |
+5 | F * | +24 | 82 | 81 | 72 | 77 | 312 |
| T33 | Catherine Zhang Toronto, ON |
+8 | F | +25 | 78 | 75 | 80 | 80 | 313 |
| T33 | Haley Yerxa Ottawa, ON |
+7 | F | +25 | 80 | 77 | 77 | 79 | 313 |
| T35 | Sarah-Eve Rheaume Québec, QC |
+11 | F | +27 | 77 | 75 | 80 | 83 | 315 |
| T35 | Shania Remandaban Coquitlam, BC |
+10 | F | +27 | 81 | 77 | 75 | 82 | 315 |
| 37 | Camryn Roadley Winnipeg, MB |
+9 | F * | +28 | 77 | 78 | 80 | 81 | 316 |
| T38 | Kehler Koss Calgary, AB |
+10 | F | +29 | 80 | 76 | 79 | 82 | 317 |
| T38 | Hailey McLaughlin Markham, ON |
+10 | F * | +29 | 77 | 75 | 83 | 82 | 317 |
| T38 | Taylor Stone Calgary, AB |
+4 | F * | +29 | 79 | 83 | 79 | 76 | 317 |
| T41 | Kelly Hellman Nelson, BC |
+9 | F * | +30 | 80 | 81 | 76 | 81 | 318 |
| T41 | Jennifer Gu West Vancouver, BC |
+9 | F * | +30 | 80 | 81 | 76 | 81 | 318 |
| T41 | Kristen Giles Georgetown, ON |
+3 | F * | +30 | 82 | 82 | 79 | 75 | 318 |
| 44 | Chloe Currie Mississauga, ON |
+3 | F * | +31 | 83 | 83 | 78 | 75 | 319 |
| 45 | Emily Romancew Pierrefonds, QC |
+10 | F * | +33 | 83 | 79 | 77 | 82 | 321 |
| T46 | Delana Basanisi Mississauga, ON |
+9 | F * | +35 | 81 | 82 | 79 | 81 | 323 |
| T46 | Alicia Easthope St. Albert, AB |
+7 | F * | +35 | 82 | 81 | 81 | 79 | 323 |
| T46 | Claire Lovan Surrey, BC |
+4 | F * | +35 | 82 | 81 | 84 | 76 | 323 |
| T49 | Ashley Chow North York, ON |
+12 | F * | +36 | 80 | 80 | 80 | 84 | 324 |
| T49 | Zhiying Zhou Niagara Falls, ON |
+7 | F * | +36 | 76 | 88 | 81 | 79 | 324 |
| T51 | Tillie Claggett Calgary, AB |
+11 | F * | +38 | 85 | 77 | 81 | 83 | 326 |
| T51 | Sukriti Harjai Niagara Falls, ON |
+10 | F * | +38 | 84 | 76 | 84 | 82 | 326 |
| T51 | Laura Jones Moncton, NB |
+10 | F * | +38 | 89 | 77 | 78 | 82 | 326 |
| T51 | Rebecca (Lu Yang) Jiang Langley, BC |
+7 | F * | +38 | 79 | 81 | 87 | 79 | 326 |
| T55 | Angela Zhang Vancouver, BC |
+16 | F * | +39 | 72 | 84 | 83 | 88 | 327 |
| T55 | Dylann Armstrong North Gower, ON |
+9 | F * | +39 | 82 | 84 | 80 | 81 | 327 |
| T55 | Vanessa Chychrun Aurora, ON |
+5 | F * | +39 | 83 | 79 | 88 | 77 | 327 |
| T58 | JiaYin Liu Kitchener, ON |
+12 | F * | +40 | 79 | 80 | 85 | 84 | 328 |
| T58 | Lory Paradis Blainville, QC |
+10 | F * | +40 | 79 | 83 | 84 | 82 | 328 |
| T58 | Stephanie Chelack Calgary, AB |
+9 | F * | +40 | 87 | 77 | 83 | 81 | 328 |
| T61 | Sarah Beqaj Toronto, ON |
+22 | F * | +41 | 74 | 81 | 80 | 94 | 329 |
| T61 | Sharmaine Rapisura Calgary, AB |
+13 | F * | +41 | 82 | 82 | 80 | 85 | 329 |
| T63 | Emily Ward Niagara Falls, ON |
+17 | F * | +42 | 79 | 79 | 83 | 89 | 330 |
| T63 | Emily Xu Burnaby, BC |
+16 | F * | +42 | 83 | 81 | 78 | 88 | 330 |
| T63 | Kiley Rodrigues Kingston, ON |
+11 | F * | +42 | 83 | 80 | 84 | 83 | 330 |
| T63 | Brooke MacKinnon Chatham, ON |
+10 | F * | +42 | 83 | 81 | 84 | 82 | 330 |
| T67 | Shirin Anjarwalla Nanaimo, BC |
+11 | F * | +44 | 83 | 83 | 83 | 83 | 332 |
| T67 | Amy Ehlert Maple Ridge, BC |
+10 | F * | +44 | 82 | 81 | 87 | 82 | 332 |
| 69 | Elizabeth Blier St. Bruno, QC |
+15 | F * | +45 | 79 | 84 | 83 | 87 | 333 |
| 70 | Cynthia Zhao Toronto, ON |
+17 | F * | +46 | 77 | 89 | 79 | 89 | 334 |
| 71 | Sandee Park West Vancouver, BC |
+19 | F * | +48 | 84 | 77 | 84 | 91 | 336 |
I.K. Kim handles bad weather to take British Open lead
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – I.K. Kim, the best player in women’s golf right now, emerged from the cold and wet with a 4-under 68 to build a two-shot lead in the Women’s British Open going into the weekend.
A two-time winner on the LPGA Tour over the last two months, Kim dropped only one shot in some of the worst conditions at Kingsbarns Links and reached the halfway point at 11-under 133. She was two shots clear of Lexi Thompson and Georgia Hall of England.
Kim displayed a remarkable fortitude in weather that veered erratically toward the end of the day between bright sunshine and torrential downpours. The 29-year-old from South Korea atoned for her lone bogey with three birdies and an eagle on the 538-yard 11th hole.
“The eagle was very unexpected,” Kim said before conceding her drive landed on a friendly downslope and gained an extra 30 yards or so. “I think this was kind of as bad as the weather could get. I expected rain, but not like this. It’s not easy to play in this kind of weather. But I feel really good about my game. I’ve been hitting the ball very well and I’m starting to make some putts. That’s when I shoot low scores.”
Still, perhaps the most significant move came from Thompson, the No. 2 player in the world.
Two-over par and birdie-free after nine-holes, the big-hitting Floridian played the homeward nine in 30 with six birdies – five in succession. In addition, she found time to add a new phrase to golf’s already voluminous terminology.
“I ball-striked it out there,” she said. That was fair enough, if grammatically flawed. Even on that disappointing front nine, the eight-time LPGA champion struck her shots with an authority few in the women’s game can match.
“I actually hit it the same throughout both nines,” she said. “I just left myself with 30-40 feet on my two bogeys and three-putted them. I hit great shots. Going in, they were going right at the flag, but they both got bounces that went sideways. Then I didn’t make the second putt. But I hit it great the whole day and just got on a roll there on the back.”
Another key to Thompson’s success so far is her caddie, Kevin McAlpine. The former Scottish Amateur champion worked four summers at Kingsbarns and knows the course well.
“Kevin has helped with my decision-making on basically every hole,” said Thompson. “His input going into the greens is especially valuable. He tells me where to land the ball and he’s been spot on every time. He knows the greens like the back of his hand, as well. He’s helped me out a lot out there.”
First-round leader Michelle Wie did not fare so well. The 27-year old American made only one birdie in a 76 that leaves her seven shots off the pace and in a tie for 21st with two rounds remaining. Wie has not won since the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open at Pinehurst No. 2.
Mr. Lube Seniors’ Championship of Canada Heads to Burlington Golf & Country Club
ACTON, Ont. – A number of Canada’s legends of golf are set compete at this year’s Mr. Lube PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada Aug. 9-11 at Burlington Golf & Country Club.
Victoria’s Jim Rutledge eyes his fifthMr. Lube PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada, but will surely face stiff competition from a myriad of players including past PGA, European, Web.com and Mackenzie-PGA TOUR Canada winners.
Rutledge’s past PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada wins came in 2015 at Credit Valley Golf & Country Club; 2013 at Lookout Point Country Club; 2012 at Emerald Hills Golf Club; and 2010 at Rattlesnake Point Golf Club. The 56-year-old is also a former winner on the Web.com Tour, has six Mackenzie-PGA TOUR Canada titles and is a former PGA Championship of Canada winner.
Notables in the field at Burlington Golf & Country Club include:
- PGA and WEB.com TOUR winner Ian Leggat
- European, WEB.com, Mackenzie-PGA TOUR Canada and PGA Championship of Canada winner Jerry Anderson
- Six-time Mackenzie-PGA TOUR Canada winner Daniel Talbot
- Four-time PGA Club Professional Championship of Canada and PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada winner Gar Hamilton
- Three-time PGA Assistants’ Championship of Canada winner Serge Thivierge
- Last year’s PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada winner Claude Grenier
- PGA Club Professional Championship of Canada and PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada winner Ken Tarling
- PGA Club Professional Championship of Canada and PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada winner Graham Gunn
- Two-time PGA Assistants’ Championship of Canada winner Philip Jonas
- Past PGA Assistants’ Championship of Canada winners Kevin Dugas and Marc Girouard
- PGA Club Professional Championship of Canada winner Ian Doig
- The PGA of Canada’s No. 12-ranked player Scott Allred
Click here for the full field and first round tee times.
At last year’s Mr. Lube PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada Claude Grenier went wire-to-wire for the win at Tangle Creek Golf & Country Club. He finished three shots better than Kevin Dugas, Marc Hurtubise, Jean Laforce and Michael Woodcock.
The PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada was first played in 1938 as a division of the Canadian PGA Championship. In 1973, the championship became an independent event and has remained as such.
Among the Canadian golf legends to win the PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada are Stan Leonard, Moe Norman—who won a record seven straight years from 1979-1985—Bob Panasik, Al Balding—who wowed the golf world by winning at age 76 in 2000—and Rutledge.
Burlington Golf & Country Club features undulating topography and an attractive location on Hamilton Bay. Today’s challenging layout at Burlington Golf and Country Club, still essentially that designed by Stanley Thompson, Canada’s leading contemporary golf course architect, opened in 1924.
Huh has 1 point lead at Barracuda Championship
RENO, Nev. – John Huh made plenty of putts in the Barracuda Championship, which leads to good results no matter how the score is kept.
Huh took only 24 putts on Thursday at Montreaux Golf and Country Club, the last one from 6 feet for his eighth birdie on his final hole to give him 15 points and a one-point lead over Stuart Appleby and Miguel Angel Carballo.
“Twenty-four putts is always nice. That was the key to make a few birdies,” Huh said. “Hopefully, I can do it the next three days.”
Appleby also had eight birdies against two bogeys, while Carballo made up ground with a pair of eagles, one in which he holed out from 160 yards on No. 17.
This is the only PGA Tour event that uses the modified Stableford format that awards five points for an eagle and three points for a birdie, while deducting one point for a bogey and three points for a double bogey or worse.
Huh, who hasn’t won since Mexico as a rookie in 2012, tied for third the only other time he played the Barracuda Championship in 2014. The timing couldn’t be better. He is not in the PGA Championship next week, meaning he has only the Barracuda Championship and the Wyndham Championship in two weeks to finish in the top 125 in the FedEx Cup and keep his full card for next season. Huh currently is at No. 112.
That’s a goal for eight of the top nine players on the leaderboard. Appleby and Carballo are outside the top 200.
Six players were at 13 points, a group that included Ryan Palmer. He needs to win to get into the PGA Championship next week at Quail Hollow. The PGA is holding a spot for a player who wins at Montreaux that is not already eligible.
Carballo only had three birdies against two bogeys, but those two eagles were worth the equivalent of five birdies (10 points). After holing out from a greenside bunker for birdie on the 16th, he holed out from 160 yards on the next hole. Then after he missed the green at No. 1 from the fairway and made bogey, the Argentine ripped a 3-wood that couldn’t see it was close until he got up near the green and saw it 8 feet from the hole.
“We were hoping for the best and it ended up being right next to the pin,” he said.
Ottawa’s Brad Fritsch is tied for 10th with 11 points while Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., has six points. David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., has five points.
Davis Love III, who celebrates the 20-year anniversary of his PGA Championship victory next week, had 11 points. His son, Dru Love, was at minus 4 points and toward the bottom of the pack.
Patrick Newcomb takes first round lead in Edmonton
Murray, Kentucky’s Patrick Newcomb shot an 8-under 62 on Thursday at Windermere Golf and Country Club to take the first round lead at the Syncrude Oil Country Championship presented by AECON, the seventh event of the 2017 Mackenzie Tour – PGA TOUR Canada season.
The 27-year old, who sits eighth on the PGA TOUR Latinoamérica Order of Merit thanks to a win at the Honduras Open presented by Indura Beach and Golf Resort, started hot with three birdies and an eagle in his first four holes, then managed four more birdies against one bogey to match the Windermere Golf and Country Club course record.
“It was just one of those special days with the putter,” said Newcomb, who added that his hot start early on put him in his comfort zone. “I have a tendency to get off to hot starts. I hit a couple of good shots and get in a rhythm. For me, I got to 5-under, and when I stepped on 14 (his fifth hole of the day) tee, I said ‘let’s keep going.’”
The 8-under 62 gave Newcomb, who shot a third-round 61 during his win in Honduras, a two-stroke advantage after day one over Tacoma, Washington’s Derek Barron, Glendale, California’s Russell Surber and Cameron Park, California’s Corey Pereira and Cordova, Illinois’ Josh Hart.
“I had a lot of approach shots that were pretty much gimmes, and obviously that’s not going to happen every day, so you just have to kind of enjoy it while you have it.,” said Barron.
Barron is making his sixth career Mackenzie Tour start after earning status at the British Columbia Q-School earlier this year. He ranks 57th on the Order of Merit thanks to finishes of T18 and T12 in the first two events of the year.
A Murray State grad, Newcomb finished T6 at the Players Cup earlier this year and co-held the 54-hole lead at the Staal Foundation Open presented by Tbaytel before tumbling to a final round 79. Last week, he played in the Kentucky State Open for a brief stop at home before resuming his season on the Mackenzie Tour, his seventh week of competition in a row.
“It was good to get home and spend a few days there afterwards. I got to see my family and work with my coach, and got to wind down for a day and a half, which was a lot more than I’ve been getting lately, so that was nice,” said Newcomb.
Newcomb is making his second career start on the Mackenzie Tour and is playing out of a category for members of PGA TOUR Latinoamérica, where he ranks eighth on the Order of Merit thanks to a win at the Honduras Open presented by Indura Beach and Golf Resort.
Newcomb played college golf at Murray State, where he collected nine individual victories. He co-held the lead at the Staal Foundation Open presented by Tbaytel through 54 holes but fell to a final round 79 and finished T38.
His 8-under 62 matches the Windermere Golf and Country Club course record set by Joe Panzeri and Matt Marshall at the 2012 ATB Financial Classic. The course played as a par-71 in 2012.
Two-time World Long Drive Champion Jamie Sadlowski, who grew up two hours away in St. Paul, Alberta, opened with a 1-under 69.
Click here for the full leaderboard.
Susan Xiao leads heading into final round of Canadian Junior Girls championship
After round two wrapped up Thursday morning, Susan Xiao from Surrey, B.C., carded a 1-under-par 71 in the afternoon to take the lead at 2 under par after three rounds of the Canadian Junior Girls Championship at Camelot Golf and Country Club.
Xiao, the leader after round one, had three birdies and no blemishes on her card other than a double-bogey on No. 13.
She leads by one-shot over London, Ont., native Ellie Szeryk who fired 1-over-par 73 on Thursday, recording her first over par round of the tournament to sit at 1 under par through 54 holes.
“My approach shots were good today,” said Xiao. “And my putting, although I lipped out a few birdie putts, overall it was good today.”
Heading into the final round as the leader won’t weigh on Xiao’s mind tonight. She plans on keeping an even keel as she tries to become the third straight British Columbia to win the Canadian Junior Girls Championship.
“I’ll just play my own game. I won’t worry about what other players are doing,” added Xiao. “Because someone from T20 could shoot a good number and win.”
Szeryk, 15, was unhappy with her third round. She started the day scorching hot pouring in four birdies in the first five holes and was 3 under par for the day through 14 holes before finishing with two bogeys and a double-bogey on No. 18.
“I feel like it was an awful ending. A lot of bad bounces and a lot of misreads. It was bad, just bad,” said Szeryk.
Szeryk’s older sister Maddie won this tournament in 2013, and the younger Szeryk has been in contact with Maddie this week as she tries to follow in her footsteps.
“I try to compete with my sister. She’s a big target for me, but I’m just trying to play my game,” said Szeryk. “She’ll be getting the lowdown on how today went for sure.”
13-year-old Emily Zhu climbed into third place at even par thanks to a 3-under-par 69 powered by an eagle on the par-5 fifth. Her round could have been even better if she’d avoided a few mistakes.
“If I didn’t make a three-putt on No. 17 I would have been 5 under,” said Zhu. “And if I didn’t try to go over the tree on No. 18 I wouldn’t have made the double. I could have been 6 or 7 under par.”
Zhu will join Xiao and Szeryk in final grouping tomorrow teeing off at 9:01 a.m.
Development Squad teammates Monet Chun and Mary Parsons are tied for fourth at 1 over par.
Chun, from Richmond Hill, Ont., carded her second consecutive under par round firing a 71 in round three to continue battling back from an opening-round 4-over-par 76.
“I was out there playing one shot at a time and being committed with my shots – it helped me a lot,” said Chun. “Tomorrow I’m going to play like today and not think about scores, and just take it one hole at a time.”
Parsons leads the field in birdies through 54 holes with 18 but has been unable to avoid mistakes. The Delta, B.C., native shot a 2-over-par 74 in round three after starting 4 over par in her first eight holes.
“The way that I fought back today is something to be proud of,” said Parsons. “But hopefully I won’t have to dig myself out of a hole again tomorrow.”
Heading into the final round there are ten players within six shots of the lead including the 2017 Quebec Junior Girls Champion Céleste Dao (Notre-Dame-de-L’Île-Perrot, Que.) and the 2017 B.C. Junior Girls Champion Alisha Lau (Richmond, B.C.), who are both tied for seventh at 4 over par.
Click here to view the full leaderboard for the 2017 Canadian Junior Girls Championship.
NOTE TO MEDIA: Photos are available for download here. (Golf Canada)
2017 CANADIAN JUNIOR GIRLS CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS
1. Susan Xiao, *70-73-71-214 -2
2. Ellie Szeryk, *71-71-73-215 -1
3. Emily Zhu, *72-75-69-216 E
4. Monet Chun, *76-70-71-217 +1
4. Mary Parsons, *72-71-74-217 +1
6. Momoka Kobori, *74-71-74-219 +3
7. Céleste Dao, *74-74-72-220 +4
7. Jasmine Ly, *72-74-74-220 +4
7. Hannah Lee, *73-73-74-220 +4
7. Alisha Lau, *72-74-74-220 +4
2017 CANADIAN JUVENILE GIRLS CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS
1. Susan Xiao, *70-73-71-214 -2
2. Ellie Szeryk, *71-71-73-215 -1
3. Emily Zhu, *72-75-69-216 E
4. Monet Chun, *76-70-71-217 +1
5. Céleste Dao, *74-74-72-220 +4
Spieth still soaking up memories of British Open
AKRON, Ohio – Jordan Spieth is one week away from a shot at the career Grand Slam.
He’s more interested in looking behind him.
Spieth returned to Dallas with the claret jug, and it wasn’t more than a few hours before he already had watched highlights – twice – of his British Open victory at Royal Birkdale. The first time was when he couldn’t get to sleep. Then, caddie Michael Greller woke up and they watched it together.
It was no less amazing, from the bogey he salvaged with a shot from the practice range to the birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie streak that followed.
And it gave Spieth a chance to set the record straight on Wednesday.
He playfully disputed the notion that he was 100 yards right of the fairway on No. 13, as television commentary suggested.
Spieth aimed for the right rough on the 13th hole to take bunkers out of play. He said he knew the ball would move a little right because of rain getting on the face of the driver, and he compounded that by leaving the club open.
Even so, he estimated he missed his target by about 20 yards. And then it hit a spectator in the head and went even more to the right, over some tall dunes and into a spot where he had to take a penalty drop onto the practice range.
“It really wasn’t that bad,” he said. “I mean, it wasn’t a good shot. It was a foul ball to the right. But I need to back myself up here in saying that I’m capable of hitting worse shots than that, OK?”
It worked out fine in the end, although Spieth is starting to realize he might be hearing more about playing from the driving range than any of his clutch shots that followed in his three-shot victory for the third leg of the Grand Slam.
He said Royal Birkdale already has asked to have a replica of the 3-iron he hit from the range, “which means that’s going to be the shot that’s pictured there and remembered there, unfortunately.”
Spieth’s spirits have rarely been this high, even with the amount of attention he will face next week at the PGA Championship, where a victory would make him the youngest player to capture the career Grand Slam.
First up is the Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone, and a chance for him to win a third straight tournament. Spieth won the Travelers Championship by holing a bunker shot in a playoff in his previous event before the British Open.
Firestone is a big golf course for a par 70, and it figures to get even longer with rain in the forecast the opening two rounds, leading tour officials to move the tee times to the morning for Thursday and Friday.
Dustin Johnson is the defending champion.
Rory McIlroy thinks he is the defending champion, too.
McIlroy won at Firestone in 2014 during the middle of his big run – the British Open, Bridgestone Invitational and PGA Championship over a four-week stretch. He missed the following year because of his ankle injury, and didn’t play last year when the World Golf Championship was moved to late June to make room in a crowded schedule for the Olympics.
“I think this week and next week, it’s probably my favourite two-week stretch of the year,” McIlroy said.
It will be a different one, for sure. McIlroy fired his caddie after the British Open and will have his best friend, Harry Diamond, on the bag the next two weeks. Johnson is simply trying to find the form that made him golf’s dominant player earlier this year when he ran off three straight victories. That fall down the stairs of his rented home on the eve of the Masters did more than wrench his back. It cost him momentum he is trying to regain.
Spieth has no such issues.
With another major in hand and having turned 24 just last week, Spieth is still soaking up his remarkable rally at Royal Birkdale and the messages he received. McIlroy sent him one. So did Phil Mickelson, who at the start of the British Open had jokingly chided Spieth for accidentally heading to the champions’ area of the locker room.
Spieth also received written notes from Jack Nicklaus and former President George W. Bush.
He has played with Bush even before Spieth turned pro.
“I’ve played a bit of golf with him back in Dallas and he always puts something funny in there,” Spieth said. “He said, ‘Call me. I think I need to give you some driving lessons,’ was what he had in there. I’ve played with him, and I know that I definitely don’t need driving lessons from him.”




