PGA TOUR

Moore, Hahn share lead in Boston

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Ryan Moore (David Cannon/ Getty Images)

NORTON, Mass. – Ryan Moore changed his schedule to pile up tournaments at the end of the year with hopes of getting into a rhythm going into the FedEx Cup playoffs.

He has no complaints with the results.

Moore backed up a good start to the playoffs with a 6-under 65 on Friday to share the first-round lead with James Hahn on a day when hardly anyone seemed too far away. After one round at the TPC Boston, 37 players were separated by three shots.

Phil Mickelson would be an exception.

Mickelson, who leads the PGA Tour in adjusted scoring average and said he wanted to win the Vardon Trophy for the first time in his career, took two swipes out of high grass in a water hazard to no avail, finally took a drop and made a quadruple-bogey 8 on the sixth hole. That sent him to 75 and in third-to-last place.

Moore and Hahn played bogey-free on a breezy day that allowed for good scoring, even though no one went terribly low. They were one shot ahead of Paul Casey and Fabian Gomez. The average score was 69.67 as 80 of the 97 players in the field were at par or better.

As usual, there were Ryder Cup implications.

Jim Furyk, J.B. Holmes and Daniel Berger were in the group at 67, all of them to make an impression before Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III starts filling out the U.S. team with three picks in 10 days. Holmes finished 10th in the standings, while Furyk was at No. 15 even though he four months recovering from wrist surgery.

Love has said every American in the Deutsche Bank Championship would be on his radar, though Moore isn’t even thinking about it. His main goal is to get to the Tour Championship for the FedEx Cup finale, and this stacked schedule at the end of the year is working in his favor.

Along with a victory in the John Deere Classic, he tied for seventh last week at The Barclays to move to No. 11 in the FedEx Cup.

“I like how I’ve been feeling with my game,” Moore said. “This is actually the sixth tournament in a row, which I don’t think I’ve ever done in my entire career on the PGA Tour. I’m getting some positive momentum going into these events. How I’ve been doing it these last few years kind of wasn’t working so I decided to change it up and play a lot more and make a final push and then I know I get a little break.

“It seems to be working, whatever that decision was.”

Emiliano Grillo and Adam Scott played together and each shot 67, though they finished differently. Grillo hit a 4-iron into the hazard on the par-5 18th, took a drop and holed out with a wedge for birdie, looking blankly as the crowd roared before throwing down his club in mock surrender. Scott hit into a greenside bunker with his second shot, had a terrible lie and took two shots to get out in saving par.

“I should have chunked a 4-iron. That’s the way to make birdie,” Scott said with a laugh.

Jordan Spieth played with them and shot a 68, saying after his round he somehow was losing some 30 yards off his driver and would try to figure out why. Barclays winner Patrick Reed and Dustin Johnson also were at 68.

Jason Day, the world No. 1, opened with a 70 and then discovered his wife and two children were involved in a car accident near their travel bus. Day said his wife was taken to the hospital as a precaution, though everyone seemed to be OK.

The top 70 in the FedEx Cup advance after this week, and it was a big start for Furyk and Steve Stricker. Furyk is at No. 84, while Stricker barely made it into the field at No. 97. Both opened at 67.

Furyk is more concerned with getting to the BMW Championship next week than his Ryder Cup lot.

“There’s really nothing you can do but go play well,” Furyk said. “So I’m going to try to do my best not to really pay too much attention to the scoreboard and go play golf and worry about the process more than the golf.”

Stricker went to a different putter, a rare move for him, switching to a face-balanced model after his wife noticed last week he had trouble keeping it square. He decided to give it shot on Friday, and it paid off. His hope is that he gets to keep playing for at least seven more rounds.

“My goal this year was just to finish in the top 125 and get back into some of the tournaments that I had been play – The Players Championship, some of the majors. Then once I did that … you know, we’re all competitive. We all want to keep playing.”

David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., and Adam Hadwin from Abbotsford, B.C., opened with matching 68s and hold shares of 20th.

PGA TOUR Americas

Dan McCarthy, Brian Dwyer share 36-hole lead at Cape Breton Open

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Dan McCarthy (Chuck Russell/ PGA TOUR)

BADDECK, N.S. – Syracuse, New York’s Dan McCarthy made a move towards solidifying his Order of Merit lead on Friday, shooting a 3-under 69 at Bell Bay Golf Club to share the 36-hole lead at the Cape Breton Open with Southlake, Texas’ Brian Dwyer.

The three-time winner on the Mackenzie Tour – PGA TOUR Canada in 2016 carded five birdies against two bogeys, reaching 10-under total through two rounds to share the lead with Dwyer, one stroke ahead of Edmond, Oklahoma’s Taylor Moore, Lake Elsinore, California’s Aaron Wise and Arbuckle, California’s Ben Geyer.

The 31-year old McCarthy, who leads the season-long money list by more than $36,000, is coming off back-to-back missed cuts in his two most recent starts, but said Friday he’s returned to the comfortable state that saw him re-write the Mackenzie Tour record book earlier this year with three wins in his first five starts of the season.

“I’m not going to watch what anyone else does. I can only control what I’m doing and how I play the course. That’s what I did very well early in the year, and I’ve had some time the last couple of weeks to figure that out,” said McCarthy.

Dwyer, meanwhile, recorded seven birdies in Friday’s breezy and often rainy conditions, including a 25-footer on the 18th hole to finish the day tied at the top with McCarthy. The blazing start comes on the heels of four straight missed cuts, a slump the 26-year old said he felt was behind him coming into this week.

“I’m just a little bit more comfortable with my swing. I worked with my coach (John Sinclair) on Monday before I flew out on Tuesday, and so far that’s paid off,” said Dwyer. “My short game around the greens and my putting have made it pretty easy on me when I’ve hit bad shots, which you’re going to do in this wind.”

With Wise and Moore – both currently in The Five and trying to chase down McCarthy for the top spot on the Order of Merit – just a shot back, McCarthy said he’d continue to put the pressure on his pursuers by sticking to the formula that’s earned him more than $100,000 in earnings and three wins this season.

“I’m just going to continue to do what I do well, and if I can continue to do that then I should be fine. The burden is on them to win and come and catch me, but if I do what I do well I should be okay,” said McCarthy.

Team Canada alumnus Austin Connelly shot a 70 and leads the Canadian contingent at 9-under.

Claude Grenier claims wire-to-wire win at Mr. Lube PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada

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Claude Grenier (PGA of Canada)

THORTON, Ont. – Entering the final round of the Mr. Lube PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada, Claude Grenier held a four-shot lead, but by mid-afternoon Friday, his lead had all but evaporated.

Grenier started his final round at Tangle Creek Golf and Country Club in Thorton, Ont., double-bogey, bogey. By the time he reached the 12th tee, he was 5-over for the day and had fallen out of first-place.

“I wouldn’t say I was really nervous early on, but I was definitely feeling something,” Grenier said. “I was 5-over-par after 11 holes and I could see all these guys all of sudden be back in the tournament, I knew I had to do something.”

That something came promptly at the 12th hole.

“Holing out from the fairway on No. 12 definitely saved my bacon out there today and changed the way my round was going.”

Grenier would make par on the remaining six holes, finishing the 54-hole championship at 2-under-par, three shots better than Kevin Dugas, Marc Hurtubise, Jean Laforce and Michael Woodcock.

With the win, Grenier added his name to a list of champions that includes Canadian golf legends Moe Norman, Bob Panasik, Al Balding, Stan Leonard and Bill Kozak.

“I look at the names on this trophy and it’s just amazing,” Grenier said. “I never would have ever thought I’d have my name on the same trophy as the great Moe Norman.”

The PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada was first played in 1938 as a division of the PGA Championship of Canada. In 1973, the PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada became an independent event and has stayed that way ever since. Norman won this championship a record seven straight years from 1979 to 1985, while Balding stunned the golf world by winning the championship at age 76 in 2000.

Michel Dagenais, Ian Doig, Luc Guilbault, Gary Jeffrey and Carl Pelletier rounded out the Top-10.

Originally from Sherbrooke, Que., Grenier now lives in Europe and is a member of the PGA of Austria. The 56-year-old said it was a pleasure catching up with many of his old friends this week at Tangle Creek.

“There were guys here who I played junior golf with and now I see them with grey hair – it’s actually very funny,” said Grenier. “But yes, it’s also very nice to see all the old gang again.”

Daniel Talbot defended his Super Senior division title, besting Gar Hamilton and Hocan Olsson by one shot. In the Diamond division, Atilla Becsy was crowned champion.

Ninety-nine-year-old Gord Delatt; 94-year-old and five-time PGA Seniors’ Championship of Canada winner Bill Kozak; and 86-year-old John Henrick also participated in a 9-hole PGA of Canada legends exhibition match Friday afternoon at Tangle Creek.

LPGA Tour Team Canada

Chella Choi leads LPGA Manulife Classic in Canada

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Chella Choi (Richard Martin-Roberts/ Getty Images)

CAMBRIDGE, Ont. – Chella Choi ended up on top of the LPGA Manulife Classic leaderboard Thursday at windy Whistle Bear when Belen Mozo unraveled with a closing triple bogey.

Choi shot a 6-under 66, finishing with a birdie on the par-5 ninth.

“A lot of wind,” said Choi, the South Korean player who won the Marathon Classic winner last year for her first LPGA Tour title. “But my game is good and driving is good, shot was good, so I made a lot of birdies.”

Mozo was 7 under before running into trouble on the par-4 18th. The Spaniard finished with a 68.

Second-ranked Ariya Jutanugarn was four strokes back after a 70 in her bid to win three straight events for the second time this season. The 20-year-old Thai player began her latest streak at the Women’s British Open, and rebounded from a knee injury that forced her to withdraw during the Rio Olympics to win the Canadian Pacific Women’s Open on Sunday in Alberta.

Using a driver in competition for the first time since May, she dropped two strokes on the back nine after birdieing the first three holes and making the turn in 4 under.

U.S. Open champion Brittany Lang, second last year at Whistle Bear after winning the inaugural event in 2012 at Grey Silo, was a stroke back at 67 along with South Korea’s In Gee Chun, Spain’s Azahara Munoz and Sweden’s Dani Holmqvist. Lang holed a lob wedge for eagle on the par-5 third – her 12th hole.

“The course was playing a little bit tricky with the wind and couldn’t get to that par 5,” Lang said. “I actually laid it up a little bit too far left and through. I was like, ‘Awe, should still be OK.” And then when I hit it, it was nice and high and on the right line. And we couldn’t see it. And then my husband and all our friends were up there, and they were screaming, so it was a pretty cool reaction.”

Munoz noted the tournament’s later dates after her bogey-free round.

“I think it’s nicer playing now than in June,” Munoz said. “I think last year was a little cooler the first few days. The course is great. The greens roll really nice, so if you hit a good putt, the ball goes in.”

Top-ranked Lydia Ko had a 70. The 19-year-old New Zealander has four LPGA Tour victories this year.

Defending champion Suzann Pettersen shot a 69 in the group with Ko and Stacy Lewis (70). Pettersen won at 22 under last season in the first year at Whistle Bear after three at Grey Silo.

Jutanugarn played alongside 18-year-old

Canadian star Brooke Henderson matched Jutanugarn with a 70 in their afternoon group.

“The wind really picked up on the back nine. It was kind of difficult,” the 18-year-old Henderson said. “You could see all three of us not really playing exactly the way we wanted just because of the wind and the conditions. But I finished 2 under on afternoon tee time in windy conditions. I’m happy. I’m just excited to tee it up tomorrow where conditions will be a little bit softer and not as much wind.”

Henderson, from Smith Falls in southeastern Ontario, beat Ko in a playoff in June in the KPMG Women’s PGA for her first major title, and successfully defended her Portland Classic title in early July.

Choi has concentrated on improving her driving. She hit 10 of 14 fairways Thursday.

“I worked really hard the last three weeks,” Choi said. “I want to hit straight and strong my drive four days, so I focus on just my driving four days.”

Alena Sharp and Maude-Aimee Leblanc (Sherbrooke, Que.) topped the Canadians at 69. Sharp, from Hamilton, is coming off a career-best fourth-place finish in Calgary at the 2016 CP Women’s Open. Lorie Kane of Charlottetown had a 70, one week after being the 51-year-old was inducted into the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame.

Team Canada alumna Jennifer Ha of Calgary opened with a 71 for a share of 53rd, while fellow alum Anne Catherine Tanguay (Québec City) and current National Team member Josée Doyon (St-Georges-de-Beauce, Que.) sit T70 at even-par. London, Ont., native Maddie Szeryk – also a member of Team Canada – is T97 at 1-over.

Vivian Tsui from Markham, Ont., shot 74, while Samantha Richdale (Kelowna, B.C.) and Jennifer Kirby (Paris, Ont.) carded 75s. Nicole Vandermade (Brantford, Ont.) recorded a 76 and Selena Costabile (Thornhill, Ont.) shot 81.

PGA TOUR Americas

Canada’s Connelly sits T6 at Cape Breton Open

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Austin Connelly (Josh Schaefer/ PGA TOUR)

Arbuckle, California’s Ben Geyer shot an 8-under 64 on Thursday at Bell Bay Golf Club to take the first round lead at the Cape Breton Open, the 10th event of the 2016 Mackenzie Tour – PGA TOUR Canada season.

The 24-year old carded two eagles and four birdies on the day, setting the new competitive course record at Bell Bay and leading by a shot over Order of Merit leader and fellow competitor Dan McCarthy through 18 holes.

“I don’t know where it came from. I have been struggling hardcore lately,” admitted Geyer, who has missed four of his last five cuts on the season and ranks 52nd on the Order of Merit. “It’s just nice to get off to a decent start. I had those two eagles in there and I got under par quick. Playing with Dan was nice too, because he had a good round going and I was trying to keep up with him. We had a lot of fun out there.”

For Geyer, things turned around on Wednesday, when a tip from fellow Mackenzie Tour player and travelling companion Talor Gooch led to better shots. The St. Mary’s College graduate hit all but one fairway on day one and was without a bogey.

“It was frustrating because I haven’t been hitting the ball well at all,” said Geyer of his struggles. “It would have been one thing if I knew what I really needed to be working on with my swing, but I haven’t been able to find out what that was. It was one little swing thought that Talor gave me on the range yesterday was real helpful today.”

While Geyer cruised, it was McCarthy who kept pace nearly the whole way. The 31-year old was making his first start in three weeks after missing the National Capital Open to Support Our Troops to rest up for the season’s final three events, a break the three-time Mackenzie Tour winner said was much-needed after missing his last two cuts.

“That little slump that I went through, I definitely learned a lot about how many weeks in a row I can play and what happens when I get tired, because I just got a little sloppy with things I normally do very well with,” said McCarthy, who had played eight straight weeks following the ATB Financial Classic, including a PGA TOUR start at the RBC Canadian Open. “I didn’t have the patience that I started off the year with, so I spent a few weeks back home to kind of re-assess where I was physically and mentally.”

Two shots behind Geyer and one shot behind McCarthy were Lexington, Kentucky’s Kyle Wilshire, as well as current Order of Merit No. 3 Taylor Moore and No. 5 Aaron Wise, who bolstered their chase for The Five with a pair of 6-under 66s.

Team Canada alumnus Austin Connelly opened with a 67 and holds a share of 6th. The dual citizen from Irving, Texas is having a homecoming of sorts, having spent his summers nearby.

“My granddad’s coming up, and a couple of my really close friends are coming up from Church Point. I’ll go to dinner with them tonight, and it’ll be nice to have some friendly support this week.”

 

Amateur

Golf Canada names 2016 World Amateur Teams

Golf Canada WATC 2016

Oakville, Ont. – Golf Canada is pleased to announce the six individuals selected to represent Canada at the 2016 World Amateur Team Championship, conducted by the International Golf Federation. The championships—featuring both a women’s (September 14-17) and men’s (September 21-24) competition—will take place in Riviera Maya, Mexico.

Representing Canada on the women’s side will be Maddie Szeryk, 20, of Allen, Tex., Josée Doyon, 23, of St-Georges-de-Beauce, Que., and Naomi Ko, 18, of Victoria, B.C. The trio will compete for the Espirito Santo Trophy at the Mayakoba El Cameleón Golf Club and Iberostar Playa Paraiso Golf Club.

The men’s team selected to represent Canada consists of Jared du Toit, 21, of Kimberley, B.C., Garrett Rank, 28, of Elmira, Ont., and Hugo Bernard, 21, of Mont-St-Hilaire, Que. Also contested on both Mayakoba El Cameleón Golf Club and Iberostar Playa Paraiso Golf Club, the men compete for the Eisenhower Trophy.

“The World Amateur Team Championships are one of the pinnacle events that we use to benchmark our players performance and development globally,” said Jeff Thompson, Golf Canada’s Chief Sport Officer. “Our recent success in this event is a reflection of our commitment to supporting and developing some of the world-class talent that we have here in Canada, and we hope to demonstrate that again this year with the remarkable group of athletes chosen to represent us. Though the selection process was difficult, I remain confident that this team will represent our country in a very positive light.”

Women’s Team Bios:
Maddie Szeryk, a member of Team Canada’s National Squad for the past two years, will lead the women’s squad into competition as the top-ranked Canadian at No. 40 on the World Amateur Golf Rankings (WAGR). She finished a strong sophomore campaign at Texas A&M by earning First Team All-SEC honours for the second consecutive year, highlighted by a win at the Florida State Match-Up. Szeryk’s summer featured strong finishes at the Canadian Women’s Amateur (T14) and North & South Amateur Championship (Round of 16). The 2015 Ontario Women’s Amateur champion added valuable experience playing in her second consecutive CP Women’s Open against the LPGA’s top athletes. The 20-year-old has prior experience representing Canada on the global stage, finishing tied for 15th at the 2014 Youth Olympics in Nanjing, China.

Josée Doyon is in her rookie year on Team Canada’s National Amateur Squad, but has the poise of an experienced veteran. Doyon is fresh off completing her collegiate golf with the Kent State Golden Flashes, where she was named the Mid-American Conference Golfer of the Year in her junior season on the heels of three consecutive wins. The 23-year-old has consistently posted impressive results in 2016, including defending her title at the Quebec Women’s Amateur Championship, a win at the Porter Cup and a T9 finish at the Canadian Women’s Amateur.

An experienced member of Canada’s national team, Naomi Ko is in her fourth year with the Team Canada program. The 18-year-old spent three years with the Development Squad before graduating to the Amateur Squad this season. Ko has shown flashes of brilliance on home soil this summer, capturing the Canadian Junior Girls Championship and recording a T7 finish in the deep Canadian Women’s Amateur field. She also gained LPGA experience in 2016 by qualifying for the U.S. Women’s Open and playing in the CP Women’s Open. In 2015, Ko finished 5th at the B.C. Women’s Amateur and T2 at the Ontario Women’s Amateur.

Men’s Team Bios:
Jared du Toit became a familiar name to Canadians following his captivating performance at the PGA TOUR’s RBC Canadian Open. The Kimberley, B.C., product captured the hearts of many in a thrilling run at Glen Abbey Golf Club, where he played in the final group on Sunday to crack the Top-10 in a tie for ninth. The 21-year-old is entering his senior year of collegiate golf for the Arizona State Sun Devils, following a junior season that saw him post five Top-10 finishes. His impressive campaign also features Top-5 finishes at the Monroe Invitational and Porter Cup, a win at the Glencoe Invitational and a T15 finish at the Canadian Men’s Amateur. In 2015, du Toit was crowned the B.C. Men’s Amateur champion.

Garrett Rank is no stranger to competing for Canada on the big stage, having done so for three years as part of Team Canada’s Amateur Squad. At 28 years old, Rank is balancing a busy career on the road as a full-time NHL referee, while continuing to compete at high-level amateur golf events. The Elmira, Ont., native recently locked up his third consecutive victory at the Canadian Men’s Mid-Amateur Championship to add to a T9 finish at the Canadian Men’s Amateur and a T2 finish at the Sunnehanna Amateur. He added a T77 finish in his second consecutive RBC Canadian Open appearance and a round of 32 finish at the U.S. Amateur. Rank also boasts the experience of representing Canada in the 2015 Pan-American games, where he finished 15th.

Hugo Bernard made a lasting impression in his rookie campaign with the Saint Leo Lions, posting six Top-5 finishes in eight events, including medalist honours at the NCAA Div II Championship. His efforts at Saint Leo earned him Freshman of the Year honours to go with being named as a first-team all-American. The 21-year-old Mont-St-Hilaire, Que., product followed his collegiate season with a victory at the Canadian Men’s Amateur Championship after finishing runner-up the year prior. Bernard also collected a win in his home province at the Alexander of Tunis.

About the World Amateur Team Championships:
A biennial competition, the World Amateur Team Championship has been played since 1958, with the winner taking home the Eisenhower Trophy. The United States won the 2014 title in Karuizawa, Japan, by two strokes over the Canadian contingent of Corey Conners (Listowel, Ont.), Taylor Pendrith (Richmond Hill, Ont.) and Adam Svensson (Surrey, B.C.).

Conducted every two years, the World Women’s Amateur Team Championship has been staged since 1964, with the winner earning the Espirito Santo Trophy. In 2014, Australia claimed the title by two strokes over the Canadian team of Brooke Henderson (Smiths Falls, Ont.), Augusta James (Bath, Ont.), and Brittany Marchand (Orangeville, Ont.).

In 28 appearances at the World Amateur Team Championship, Canada has captured the Eisenhower Trophy on one occasion (1986) and earned runner-up honours five times. In 25 appearances at the Women’s World Amateur Team Championship, Canada has earned runner-up honours four times.

The World Amateur Team titles are contested over four days of stroke play. A country may field a team of two or three players. In each round, the total of the two lowest scores constitutes the team score for the round. The four-day total is the team’s score for the championship.

The World Amateur Team Championships are conducted by the International Golf Federation, which was founded in 1958 to encourage the international development of the game and to employ golf as a vehicle to foster friendship and sportsmanship. The IGF is comprised of 146 National Federation Members in 141 countries and 22 Professional Members. The IGF serves as the International Olympic Committee’s recognized International Federation for golf.

The 2018 championship will be contested at Carton House (Montgomerie and O’Meara Courses) in Maynooth, Ireland.

CSGA to match Golf in Schools adoptions during Golf in Schools Week beginning Sept. 5

Golf Canada's Adopt a School Week - Golf in Schools

To mark the start of the 2016/17 school year, the Canadian Seniors Golf Association (CSGA) have generously offered to match Golf in Schools adoptions in support of Golf Canada’s Adopt a School Week.

Starting the week of Sept. 5, the CSGA will be directly matching adoptions, giving donors the option to select two schools that will receive the Golf in Schools program, while only donating the funds for one.

Every student should experience the wonders of golf. With each school adoption, facilities and donors help make this vision a reality. Each adopted school receives the full program kit which includes age-appropriate golf clubs and a teacher-friendly learning resource. Developed in conjunction with the PGA of Canada and Physical Health Education (PHE) Canada, the learning resource now incorporates Life Skills into the curriculum—placing added focus on transferrable skills both on and off the golf course.

This limited time offer will match adoptions up to an aggregate total of $20,000 (CAD). To adopt a school now and double your impact visit golfcanada.ca/adoptaschool

Canadian Seniors Golf Association

Amateur Canadian Men's Senior Championship

Grand Niagara Golf Club sets the stage for Canadian Men’s Senior Championship

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Grand Niagara Golf Club

NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. – The 2016 Canadian Men’s Senior Championship will visit the Niagara region for the 2016 Canadian Men’s Senior Championship. A qualifying round will take place at Hunters Pointe Golf Course in Welland, Ont., on Sunday, September 4 before the championship’s four tournament rounds begin on September 6 at the Grand Niagara Golf Club.

“Golf Canada is thrilled to once again visit Niagara Falls for our national amateur championships,” said Tournament Director Justine Decock. “It has been our pleasure to partner with these tremendous venues for what is sure to be a fantastic championship. Our hosts at Grand Niagara have brought together a great team of volunteers; our players are going to have a wonderful experience.”

Designed by world-renowned golf course architect Rees Jones, Grand Niagara was founded in 2005. The Welland River winds through the property, offering scenic views of the rolling fairways and exquisitely contoured greens.

A full field of competitors aged 55-and-over from six countries will take to Grand Niagara for the 54th playing of this national championship in hopes of joining its list of notable winners. Returning to defend his Canadian Men’s Senior title is Jack Hall of Savannah, Ga., who battled through tough and rainy conditions at Desert Blume Golf Club in Medicine Hat, Alta., to claim the 2015 championship.

Canadian Golf Hall of Fame member Doug Roxburgh is one of several players looking to step into the winner’s circle once more. The 64-year-old from Vancouver claimed the 2014 title and finished with a share of 9th last year.

David Schultz of Calgary captured the 2013 edition of this event, adding another highlight to a career for which he was inducted into the Alberta Golf Hall of Fame in 2014. Paul Simson has won over 200 amateur titles in his career, including six North & South Senior Amateur championships. In 2010, the 65-year-old from Raleigh, N.C., became the first player to hold the British, Canadian and U.S. Senior titles in the same year – a feat that has yet to be matched.

George Stokes of New Hamburg, Ont., will play for a second consecutive Super Senior title after capturing the 36-hole, 70-and-over division in 2015. Also contested over the tournament’s first two rounds will be an inter-provincial team competition. Team Ontario finished 3-under 285 in 2015 to narrowly claim a one-stroke victory.

Following the opening two rounds, the field will be reduced to the low 70 players and ties. The champion will receive an exemption into the 2016 U.S. Senior Amateur championship to be contested at Old Warson Country Club in St. Louis, Mo., from September 17-22.

Additional information from the tournament can be found here, while details from the qualifying competition are available here.

Amateur

Daniela Darquea wins medalist honors at stage I of LPGA Qualifying Tournament

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Daniela Darquea (Symetra Tour)

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – Daniela Darquea (Quito, Ecuador) carded a 2-under, 70 on Sunday to earn medalist honors at Stage I of LPGA Qualifying Tournament with a four-day total of 10-under, 278. She was the only player, in a field that started at 347, to post four straight under-par rounds. Princess Superal (Dasmarinas City, Philippines), the 2014 U.S. Junior Girls’ Amateur champion and Sarah Schmelzel (Phoenix, Ariz.), a Golfweek Honorable Mention All-American at South Carolina, finished in a tie for second at 9-under, 279. The youngest player in the field, 17-year-old Nasa Hataoka (Japan) finished fourth at 8-under, 280.

A total of 92 players advanced out of Stage I and the cut was made at 6-over, 278.

Darquea, a senior at the University of Miami, tallied three birdies against just one bogey in the final-round. She made just five bogeys over the four rounds.

“I was really focused on getting to the second stage and I had a really good week here,” said Darquea. “I always thought my game was on point and it is probably the best golf I’ve played in my life.”

Darquea, a Golfweek Third Team All-American in 2016, intends to try and reach the LPGA Tour for the start of the 2017 season. She would forego the second half of her senior season if she makes it through Stage II and III and decides to turn professional.

“I had a really good year at Miami and this summer I went home to Ecuador and I started practicing a lot,” said Darquea. “I had surgery in January (to clear wrist inflammation) and I am just getting more and more comfortable.”

Darquea will now gear up for Stage II.

“I feel I am one step closer to my dream,” said Darquea. “I think I now need to focus on Stage II because that is a very important step.”

There are currently no players from Ecuador on the LPGA Tour.

Three Canadians have made the cut at 294 to advance to stage II of Qualifying School. Anna Kim of Toronto posted a final-round 74 to finish the tournament with a share of ninth at 4-under 284. Taylor Kim is T58 following a 4-over 292 performance, two-strokes ahead of fellow Surrey, B.C., native Aram Choi who ended the weekend tied for 78th.

Champions Tour

Langer wins Boeing Classic playoff for 29th Senior title

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Bernhard Langer (Gregory Shamus/ Getty Images)

SNOQUALMIE, Wash.  By the time Bernhard Langer made the turn in the final round of the Boeing Classic, he was five shots out if the lead. At one point Sunday he was tied for 14th after not finishing lower than 13th in any tournament this year.

A few hours later, Langer had outlasted Kevin Sutherland and Woody Austin in a playoff and was celebrating his fourth PGA Tour Champions victory this season and 29th overall on the 50-and-over tour.

“I blew tournaments when I had a lead and I’ve come from seven behind, so you just never know,” Langer said.

Langer made a 3-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a playoff with Austin and Sutherland to win the Boeing Classic for the second time. A day after his 59th birthday, Langer birdied the par-5 18th in regulation for a 5-under 67 to match Austin and Sutherland at 13-under 203 at TPC Snoqualmie Ridge. Austin also had a 67, and Sutherland shot 64, the low round of the week.

It took a special stretch for Langer to recover from a shaky front nine where he needed a few lengthy par putts to stay on the edge of contention. Langer went out in 1-over 37, but played the back nine in 6-under 30, also making birdies on Nos. 10-13 and 15.

“When he gets hot with that broom,” Austin said in reference to Langer’s putter, “you can’t beat that broom.”

Langer tied Lee Trevino for second on the career victory, still well behind leader Hale Irwin at 45. Langer also won the Boeing Classic in 2010.

Langer took advantage of Austin and Sutherland both finding bunkers on the 18th in the playoff. Sutherland ended up in a bunker off the tee, while Austin’s second to the par 5 found a greenside bunker. Langer’s second shot landed 10 yards short of the green and he nearly chipped in for eagle before making the birdie putt to win.

“You need to be precise and have the nerve and play the golf course the way it needs to be played,” Langer said. “There’s still a little bit of life left in me.”

Gene Sauers, the second-round leader and U.S. Senior Open winner two weeks ago, shot a 72 to finish a shot out of the playoff. Sauers started his day with two straight birdies to reach 14 under. But he struggled on the back nine, bogeying three of the first five holes and allowed the chase group to catch up. Sauers was still in contention until making bogey at the 17th after his tee shot came up short. Sauers made birdie at the 18th to finish alone in fourth.

While Langer rolled through the back nine, Austin was hot on the front nine going out in 32. His first mistake of the round came at the 15th when he went for the green in two on the par 5 unaware he was in a tie for the lead because electronic scoreboards on the back nine were not working. Austin found a bunker and ended up making bogey.

“I would have laid up to the right for sure, absolutely, no question,” said Austin, who birdied Nos. 17 and 18 to get into the playoff.

Sutherland started the day seven shots behind Sauers and made eight birdies with no bogeys in his round. Sutherland was attempting to win his first stroke-play tournament on either the regular or senior tour.

 A 66-69-71 showing moved Calgary’s Stephen Ames into a share of sixth at 10-under 206. Rod Spittle of St. Catharines, Ont., carded four birdies on a 3-under day to jump into a tie for 43rd at 1-under.