Checking in with Team Canada

The James’ – a family rooted in golf

Austin James
Austin James (Minas Panagiotakis/Golf Canada)

Most golf fans are familiar with Italy’s Molinari brothers, Francesco and Edoardo Molinari; Tiger and Cheyenne Woods; the Haas and Stadler father-son duos; and of course, the Henderson sisters, Brooke and Brittany, here at home. But there are many more competitive golfing families out there, including the James’.


For Geoff and Jean James, it was quite common to see their daughter Augusta promptly pop out of her bedroom when the alarm clock went off for school. She’d then quietly launch into her regular routine of brushing her teeth, getting dressed and making breakfast.

The final task on her daily to-do list was to venture into another bedroom and wake younger brother Austin from his slumber. He was not going to miss the bus on her watch.

“She would wake me up for school and be on my ass if I wasn’t there on time,” laughs Austin. “She’s definitely the more punctual one.”

“I am notoriously bad for babying him,” Augusta admits. “He definitely knows how to take care of himself but he’s just so laid back that sometimes to me it doesn’t look like it.”

Now in their 20s, the school bus seems like a distant memory for the James kids. In its place are airplanes and cars, the usual form of transportation for two emerging young golfers. Augusta, a third-year pro on the LPGA Tour and Symetra Tour, and Austin, a senior at Charleston Southern University, are both prized athletes with Golf Canada’s high-performance program.

Big sis is on the Young Pro Squad while little bro is a National Amateur Team member, though their primary grooming ground has been Loyalist Country Club in Bath, Ont.

That’s where father Geoff is positioned as the head professional, providing easy access to the tee and practice facilities. They’d spend hours upon hours there in the summer and, once they were old enough to work, escape for a quick round after their shifts.

“Growing up I was always very competitive with her and I would keep score to try to beat her,” remembers Austin. “I don’t think she was paying much attention to what my score was because I would lose 98 per cent of the time. She would wax me up and down the golf course.”

“He only thought that I wasn’t keeping score,” answers Augusta. “But I was counting down the days until I wasn’t going to be able to hit it as far as him or beat him as easily. When we first moved to Loyalist he was actually playing a tee up from me. Now I have such a difficult time keeping up with him.”

Standing six-foot-three, Austin towers over his older sister and uses his strength to overpower golf courses too. That, along with his putting, has helped him even out the friendly-but-fierce matches with pint-sized Augusta.

It wasn’t any easier when they were on the same team either. At 10 and 12 years old, Austin actually played a few levels up on Augusta’s hockey team. She was a solid defenseman in a boys league, but he was the star forward.

“It had its challenges sometimes because he was so much better than me,” Augusta says. “It took a little while I guess to just relax with that fact but it was hard to be too upset when we were winning hockey games because he was on that team.”

The James’ were never a one-sport family and Augusta acknowledges her edge on the ice carried over to the golf course. Austin too.

“It gives you kind of a grit or competitiveness that I find a lot of golfers don’t really have,” he explains. “So I think it was really beneficial. She started gravitating to golf at 12 or 13 and I was a little later, focusing on hockey until 15 or 16.”

When Austin did join Augusta on the links full time, his natural abilities allowed him to catch up quickly. However, that only pushed the elder sibling to be more focused and determined to stay a step ahead.

Augusta composed a sterling amateur career, logging high finishes at the Ontario Women’s Amateur, Porter Cup, and U.S. Women’s Amateur over the years. But the brightest moment from Augusta’s pre-professional days came in 2014 when she captured the Canadian Women’s Amateur, beating favourite Brooke Henderson in the process. She was the talk of her town and her house.

For two weeks. Because Austin matched her feat by winning the Canadian Junior Boys Championship.

“For them to win back-to-back national championships, two weeks apart, that is something that I never even imagined,” says Geoff. “It takes a lot of work to win a national championship and for two of them to do it, back to back, brother and sister, I thought that was pretty cool.”

Like always, there was no animosity whatsoever towards Austin for stealing Augusta’s thunder. The James family has always operated like a team. The kids continue to feed off each other’s strengths, with Augusta’s work ethic rubbing off on Austin and Austin’s calm, creative demeanour now present in Augusta. They often track each other’s play from afar and turn to each other for improvement or reassurance.

“I definitely value his opinion a lot on my golf game,” she adds.

“You have to let things roll off your back and he helps me do that because he is so laid back. I can take a lot from him and from growing up with him to my golf game for sure.”

The siblings will get to spend more time training and relaxing together — they are both big movie buffs — in the fall once Austin graduates and eventually turns pro, with the plan to join his sister down in Florida.

It speaks to the strength of their bond despite the distance they’ve grown accustomed to over the past five or six years when Augusta left for North Carolina State University. More than anything, it reveals their family values and character.

“Of everything that I’m proud of, it’s nothing to do with golf but how they handle themselves with everybody that they come into contact with. They’re just really good kids,” explains Geoff, noting their development and progress off the course.

“Most importantly to me is how they’ve turned out as people.”

Though both are projecting to long careers in the professional ranks they know their future wouldn’t be possible without their past, in which mom and dad a played pivotal role.

“It was very instrumental,” reflects Austin. “Those are the two biggest influences in mine and (Augusta’s) golf world, bar none.”

“They’ve afforded us all these opportunities. They put a lot of time, money, effort, sleepless nights into us,” adds Augusta. “So I hope that we’ve made them proud and shown that we will work hard in appreciation of the sacrifices they’ve made for us.”


Spring_2017_Cover_ENThis article was originally published in the Family Issue edition of Golf Canada Magazine. Click here to view the full magazine

From the Archives

The amazing Thompsons

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(Golf Canada)

Legendary Canadian designer Stanley receives most of the praise but his four brothers all shared deep connections with the game too.


Stanley Thompson is a Canadian golf institution. That is a universally shared opinion. The renowned course designer is to golf in this country what Harry Colt is to the British Isles and what Donald Ross and Alistair Mackenzie are to the U.S. — the benchmark and standard by which classic and even modern courses are routinely judged.

Being one of golf architecture’s immortals, Thompson enjoys a status reserved for the revered and is on a pedestal accorded to few.

During an illustrious career spanning over three decades, he designed or was involved in the construction of more than 145 courses, including some of this nation’s finest: Capilano, St. George’s, Cape Breton Highlands, Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge and Fairmont Banff Springs, to name a select few.

Along with Ross, he is one of the co-founders of the American Society of Golf Course Architects (ASGCA) and his immediate understudies, Robert Trent Jones, Robbie Robinson, Howard Watson and Geoff Cornish, passed along Thompson’s visionary talent to a third generation of Canadian architects. That contemporary group includes Doug Carrick, Thomas McBroom, Graham Cooke and Les Furber.

The Toronto Terror’s reputation has even crossed over to the sporting mainstream. Already a member of the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame (1980), the federal government named Thompson a Person of National Significance in Canada in 2005, an honour bestowed on the designer posthumously by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada. Only two years ago, and more than 60 years after his passing, he was inducted into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame.

However, his well-documented career features another claim to fame. He was one of five members of the “Amazing Thompsons,” a title Stanley proudly shared with his four brothers — Nicol, Mathew, Bill and Frank.

Arguably the royal family of Canadian golf, the Thompson boys dominated the golf scene during the early 1920s, led by eldest brothers Nicol and Mathew as professionals and the younger Bill, Stanley and Frank as decorated amateurs.

“They were fine golfers with a lot of talent and were definitely a force to be reckoned with back in the day,” explains Stan Thompson, Nicol’s grandson. “My grandfather was the head professional at Hamilton Golf & Country Club for many, many years. He was good enough to lead the first two rounds of the Canadian Open played there in 1930.”

“He also won the 1922 PGA Championship of Canada and finished second in 1913 in the (Canadian) Open. Frank and Bill Thompson were also very successful, winning three Canadian Amateurs between them. Frank also won the Florida Winter Amateur one year and once beat Bobby Jones in a match. Quite often back then they would take road trips together to play. When they showed up at events it was like, ‘Okay, who is going to be second?’ All the brothers were players first.”

The golf bloodline of the working class Thompson brothers begins where you expect: in the caddie yard. All five boys looped at Toronto Golf Club and learned the game’s finer points under legendary Canadian pro George Cumming, who would eventually join forces with Nicol to form the first incarnation of the Thompson family golf course design business.

temp fix empty alt images

The Thompson brothers in 1923. Left to right: Frank, Mat, Nicol, Stanley and Bill

At Toronto GC, the boys were surrounded by greatness. Distinguished Canadian champions Karl Keffer, Albert Murray and Charles Murray were all members.

“The influence of Toronto Golf Club was very important to all of their careers,” reflects Mathew Thompson’s grandson, Matt Thompson. “It was the connections they had there. That and the friendships they had with so many greats of the day, players like Bobby Jones, were very important and I’m sure quite instrumental in their success as golfers. The more I dig into it, the more interesting the family history gets.”

Even the lives of the Thompson women — mother Jeannie and sisters Marion, Betty, Isobel and Jean — were intertwined with the game. According to the Thompson Society website, Betty was the family financial wizard. For years she looked after the books for the family’s foray into course design while also running her own mail-order company.

“She was smart. All of the girls enjoyed themselves too. They liked a good party,” Stan Thompson added.

Fine players first, the Thompson boys became immersed in course architecture early on. Influenced by Colt’s routing and detail at Toronto GC, they collaborated in their formative years to build Rye Field, a six-hole family short course nearby. It proved a humble beginning for what would eventually become a thriving national and international business.

Regrettably this chapter of Thompson family history would transpire under difficult circumstances: the passing of patriarch James Thompson.

With the father of the family gone, eldest brother Nicol called a family meeting where it was decided that Stanley, who had just returned from the First World War, would assume control of the Thompson design company. The rest of the boys would remain in golf in their various capacities.

“They were in business together off and on the golf course,” said Stan Thompson, “but what is interesting about that, and I’ve seen it mentioned frequently, is that Stanley was anointed the designated course designer. That was his calling. The boys recognized it. My grandfather considered himself a professional first. Same with Mathew. It made sense for Stanley to assume that role.”

In the ensuing years the decision proved to be well considered. Thompson’s first design, Muskoka Lakes Golf & Country Club, received high praise. In 1922 he branched out to form his own firm, Stanley Thompson & Co. Limited, where he quickly secured status as the country’s go-to architect.

Before the decade closed he had cemented his reputation with the completion of Alberta’s Jasper Park Lodge and Banff Springs and Toronto’s St. George’s.

As business continued to flourish it was not uncommon for the other boys to step up to lend an assist. Nicol was still highly regarded. In his early days he played pivotal design roles in both courses at Hamilton’s Chedoke Golf Club; Midland Golf & Country Club; Brantford Golf & Country Club; and Owen Sound Golf and Country Club (now called Legacy Ridge).

He also worked on several courses in and around the Niagara Peninsula. Occasionally through the years that has sparked debate and prompted research into which Thompson did what?

“I think it’s partly their own fault,” Stan Thompson asserts. “As players, they didn’t promote themselves and my grandfather certainly didn’t self-promote as a course designer. It wasn’t important to him. He didn’t need to be known for anything other than being a club professional.”

Today, golf remains a staple in the lives of many of the post generations of Thompsons. Some members of the family play better than others but the passion is strong throughout.

“My dad, Nicol Jr., won the Ontario Junior in 1925 and 1926,” Stan Thompson adds. “I still play. I’m in my 70s now and I have had nowhere near the talent my father and grandfather or uncles had but the thing I and a lot of the family inherited from them was a true love of the game.”

In modern golf circles the Thompson name remains prominent thanks in large part to the Stanley Thompson Society, an organization founded in 1998 by the late Bill Newton, a cousin of Matt and Stan Thompson. It remains dedicated to the conservation of classic Thompson golf courses through education and awareness.

“My cousin Matt and I say this all the time. We wish now we had heard more stories from them when we were younger,” Stan Thompson says, “but you can’t go back. What we can do is celebrate them as part of the hierarchy of golf in Canada. As members of the family we’re pleased by the attention the Thompson family name continues to receive. I think all of them would be proud.”


Spring_2017_Cover_ENThis article was originally published in the Family Issue edition of Golf Canada Magazine. Click here to view the full magazine

LPGA Tour

So Yeon Ryu wins in Arkansas; 1st 2 time winner this year

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

This time, So Yeon Ryu was able to celebrate – without any hint of drama or suspense.

And the third-ranked South Korean might just have used victory Sunday in the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship as a springboard for a possible rise to No. 1 in the world.

Ryu became the LPGA Tour’s first two-time winner this season, finishing at a tournament-record 18-under 195. She won the ANA Inspiration two months ago in California for her second major title, a controversial playoff victory after Lexi Thompson was penalized four strokes for a third-round rules violation reported by a television viewer during the fourth round.

“To be honest, after I won the ANA Inspiration, a lot of people said I maybe I didn’t deserve to win the tournament,” Ryu said. “It was understandable if someone was a big fan of Lexi … (Sunday’s win) feels a bit more free than after the ANA.”

Five strokes ahead after a course-record 10-uner 61 on Saturday, Ryu closed with a 69 for a two-shot victory over fellow South Korean player Amy Yang and Thailand’s Moriya Jutanugarn.

Yang finished with a 64, and Jutanugarn had a 66.

Local favourite Stacy Lewis (69) and Michelle Wie (64) tied for fourth at 13 under.

Ryu became the tour’s first repeat winner in the 16th event of the year, winning at Pinnacle Country Club four years after losing a playoff to Inbee Park in event.

“Hopefully, there are many more to come,” Ryu said before leaving for the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship in Illinois.

Ryu’s lead was at four shots midway through the final round, but it closed to two for a brief stretch on the back nine. Moments after Ryu fell to 17 under after missing the green on the par-3 11th en route to her lone bogey of the week, Yang gave the final round its first taste of suspense with a birdie on the 12th.

The birdie pushed Yang to 15 under, but she followed with bogeys on 13 and 14 _ and Ryu quickly extended her lead back to five shots with a birdie of her own on the par-4 12th. She also had a long par-saving up-and-down out of the bunker on the par-4 13th.

Despite the big lead to open the round, Ryu continued to play aggressively. She went at a difficult pin location on the par-3 sixth and on her third shot into the par-5 14th _ with the pin perilously close the front of the green and a steep slope leading into the water.

“I just tried not to do something special,” Ryu said. “Just better to be like me and play to win the tournament.”

Defending champion Lydia Ko set the previous tournament best of 17 under last year. The second-ranked New Zealander shot a 68 on Sunday to tie for 25th at 8 under.

Lewis began the day five shots back and in the final pairing with Ryu, but struggled for much of the day before closing with an eagle on the par-5 18th.

“So Yeon’s played great for a year now, so I’m not surprised,” Lewis said. “She did exactly what she needed to do today; made some good key par putts, especially there on the back side.”

Click herefor the full leaderboard.

PGA TOUR

Jordan Spieth holes bunker shot to win Travelers playoff, David Hearn T8

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
( Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Jordan Spieth needed an extra hole, a little bit of luck and an amazing final shot to finish off a wire-to-wire victory in the Travelers Championship.

The two-time major champion holed out from 60 feet for birdie from a greenside bunker on the first hole of a playoff with Daniel Berger on Sunday at TPC River Highlands.

The 23-year-old Texan joined Tiger Woods as the only PGA Tour players with 10 victories in the era since World War II. Woods won 15 times before he turned 24.

“That was one for the ages,” said Spieth, also the winner at Pebble Beach in February.

Spieth held a one-stroke edge after each of the first three rounds. He closed with an even-par 70 to match Berger – who birdied three of the final six holes for a 67 – at 12-under 268.

Berger, the Memphis winner two weeks ago before missing the cut last week at the U.S. Open, just missed a 50-foot putt from off the 18th green left that would have forced a second playoff hole.

“Jordan does Jordan things,” Berger said. “So there’s not really much you can say. I’m obviously disappointed, but happy to be in the position I was in today.”

Berger began the round in third place, three shots back. He tied Spieth for a lead with a 5-foot birdie putt on 15 as Spieth was making bogey on 14 and tied him again with a birdie from 8 feet at 17.

The pair, playing a group apart, both hit their approach shots on 18 into the same greenside bunker. Both chipped out close to the hole and both saved par to force the playoff.

Berger hit his drive on the first playoff hole left and into the crowd behind a fairway bunker. Spieth seemed to clip a tree left landing in the fairway but about 150 yards short of his normal drive and 230 yards from the hole.

Spieth’s approach fell into bunker. Berger’s ran off the green to the left.

Spieth had to back up after hitting his bunker shot to see the hole. When the ball rolled straight in the cup he threw his club and did a flying chest bump into caddie Michael Greller.

“If I was in Berger’s shoes, I be cursing Jordan Spieth right now for the break off the tee and then holing a 30-yard bunker shot, that’s a lot of luck,” Spieth said.

Spieth didn’t waste any time extending his lead to three strokes Sunday. He hit his approach shot to 6 feet on the first hole and made the birdie putt, then made a 5-footer at No. 2. But those would be his final two birdies until a 16-footer on the 15th hole.

He also survived a couple of big scares. The first came when his drive on 13 went right but stuck on the side of a hill to stay out of the water. He missed a 7-foot birdie putt, but saved par.

He then hit his tee shot on the 15th left, just avoiding the water and the hazard line in the rough. He chipped to the middle of the green and made a 16-foot putt for birdie, which he thought he had missed. .

His second shot at 17 also looked as if it might hit the course’s signature lake, but landed just on the edge of the green and he made par.

“That’s a lot of luck,” Spieth said. “But I took advantage of the good breaks and am happy to come out on top.”

He’s the third player to go wire-to-wire alone in the lead at the Connecticut event. Gene Littler did it in 1959 and Tim Morris in 1982. Spieth’s only other wire-to-wire win was the 2015 Masters.

Sunday’s win was also his first win in a tournament debut. The last player to win in Cromwell in his first start was Phil Blackmar in 1985.

Charley Hoffman (66) and Danny Lee (67) tied for third, three strokes back.

David Hearn (69) of Brantford, Ont., was the low Canadian, tying for eighth at 8 under.

Mackenzie Hughes (66) of Dundas, Ont., tied for 17th at 6 under, Graham DeLaet (68) of Weyburn, Sask., was in a group at 26th at 5 under, Ottawa’s Brad Fritsch (68) was 3 under to tie for 43rd and Adam Hadwin (71) of Abbotsford, B.C., was at 1 under to tie for 57th.

Boo Weekley, who began the round a shot back in second place, shot 37 on the back nine to tie for fifth at 9 under, despite the support of a large gallery, which could be heard cheering “Boooo!” and “Boo-S-A!” every time he did something good.

Rory McIlroy tried to find his short game this week and used his third putter Sunday to help him shoot a 64, his lowest round on the tour this season. He tied for 17th at 6 under.

“I must say I felt a little more comfortable on the greens than I did the previous three days,” McIlroy said. “So, this might be one that stays (in the bag) for a few weeks.”

Defending champion Russell Knox had a poor round, with six bogeys on his first 10 holes. He shot a 73 to finish at even par.

Greyson Murray had the tournament’s only hole-in-one, acing the 177 yard eighth hole with an 8-iron. It also was the first on tour for the 23-year-old North Carolinian. He shot a 68 to finish at 5 under.

For the full leaderboard click here.

PGA TOUR

Jordan Spieth maintains lead in Travelers Championship

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Jordan Spieth continues to play just a little better than anyone else at the Travelers Championship.

The 23-year-old Texan closed with a 20-foot birdie putt for a 4-under 66 on Saturday, giving him a one-stroke lead for the third straight round at TPC River Highlands.

After predicting earlier that it would take a score of 16 under to win, the two-time major champion took a 12-under 198 total into the final round.

Boo Weekley was second after a 65. The 43-year-old Weekley, playing just in front of Spieth, birdied five of the last eight holes, basking in the chants of “Boooo! Boooo!” from the raucous gallery.

Spieth bogeyed Nos. 13 and 14, but matched Weekley with three birdies on the final four holes, capping it with the final shot of the round from below the hole.

“It’s in the shadow,” Spieth said. “I’m looking to hit the putt at the right speed. If it goes in, great, if it doesn’t, so be it, tap it in. With a few feet to go it was going to have a chance and it curled right in the middle. That was a loud roar, and those are really fun to experience.

Weekley is looking for his fourth tour title and first since 2013. The colorful Floridian said he’s been dealing with personal issues, but declined to elaborate. His had a season-best tie for 37th at the Puerto Rico Open in March and has made just eight cuts in 21 events.

Spieth is looking for his 10th tour win and second this season after a victory in February at Pebble Beach.

Weekley acknowledged that makes for an odd final pairing Sunday.

“He loves to fish, so we’ve got a little in common there,” Weekley said. “So we can talk about that.”

Daniel Berger, looking for his second victory of the month, was three strokes back after a 66.

C.T. Pan (64), David Lingmerth (65) and Paul Casey (66) were 8 under.

David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., is five shots back at 7 under after a 66. Graham DeLaet (72) of Weyburn, Sask., is 3 under, Adam Hadwin (68) of Abbotsford, B.C., is 2 under and Ottawa’s Brad Fritsch (72) is 1 under.

Because of morning showers, the players went off in threesomes from both the first and 10th tees. But the breeze helped the greens quickly dry out and play faster than had been expected.

Pan, who went out just after the rain ended, and shot a bogey-free round. The 25-year old former University of Washington star is looking for his third top-10 finish this season and his first since finishing second at Torrey Pines in January.

“It wasn’t as windy, so I made birdies on three of my first four holes,” Pan said. “That really helped my mindset and keep my momentum going.”

Spieth hit his first six fairways and got his first birdie of the day on the sixth hole, when he chipped in from 30 feet behind the green. He made another birdie on the next hole, before giving a shot back at No. 9. He repeated that pattern on the back nine, making birdies at 10 and 11 to go up by two strokes, then put his tee shot into the water at 13. He bogeyed that hole and 14.

But on 15, his chip from the greenside bunker landed inches from the hole and he had another birdie.

Spieth has a chance to join Phil Blackmar (1985) as the only players to win in their first start at the Connecticut event. He’s also trying to become the first player to lead wire-to-wire alone in the event since Tim Norris in 1982 at Wethersfield. Peter Jacobsen had at least a share of the lead after every round in 2003.

Berger had just one bogey, at the 17th, but came back with the last of his five birdies on the final hole. He won in Memphis two weeks ago before missing the cut at the U.S. Open, which was won by his Florida State teammate, Brooks Koepka. Another former Seminole teammate, Chase Seiffert, was in contention at 4 under after qualifying for the tournament Monday.

Rory McIlroy remained at even par. He’s been trying to find his short game this week and decided to switch Saturday from the putter he began using while at the U.S. Open. He spent time before his round on the practice green with several different putters before picking a new one.

The change didn’t seem to help. His first putt Saturday, a birdie attempt from 12 feet, went 3 feet past the hole and he needed 33 putts during his round of 70. He was even par overall.

For the full leaderboard click here.

LPGA Tour

Ryu shoots course record 61 at NW Arkansas Championship

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(D Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

A few weeks off was all So Yeon Ryu needed to kick-start what is shaping up to be possibly the best year of her LPGA Tour career.

The third-ranked South Korean star shot a course-record 10-under 61 on Saturday in the NW Arkansas Championship to take a five-stroke lead into the final round, putting in in great position to become the first repeat winner this year.

The ANA Inspiration winner in April for her second major title, she reached 16 under to break the tournament 36-hole record by two strokes. She had her lowest score on the LPGA Tour and matched her professional best set in the 2012 Australian Ladies Masters.

Ryu opened the year with eight straight top-10 finishes, including the major victory. She struggled in her two events after that run, finishing 56th and then missing the cut at the ShopRite LPGA Classic this month in New Jersey. Coming off a two-week break, she has returned to her early season form _ and then some.

“I played really well the beginning of this year, then I didn’t really play well at the last championship, kind of lost confidence a little bit,” Ryu said. “But I think it was great to have two weeks off, because when you have two weeks off you totally forget about how you played the last few tournaments.”

Local favourite Stacy Lewis and Moriya Jutanugarn were tied for second. They each shot 65.

“I think I go try to play a round like I have the last couple of days, really,” Lewis said. “That’s all I can do, and then hope for some help.”

First-round leader Sung Hyun Park followed her opening 63 with a 73 to drop into a tie for 10th at 6 under. Defending champion Lydia Ko was 5 under after a 67.

Hamilton’s Alena Sharp is the top Canadian. She shot a 75 and is 2 over.

A day after opening with a 65 in gusty afternoon conditions, Ryu preyed on the Pinnacle Country Club course on a calm Saturday morning.

She needed only 25 putts, posting a 30 on her opening nine holes before closing out the blistering round with three birdies on her final four holes. Ryu capped the round with an uphill 10-foot birdie putt on the par-4 nine, much to the delight of the gallery.

She also earned the praise of Ai Miyazato, the retiring Japanese star who finished a group ahead of Ryu and was nearby at the scorer’s tent as the South Korean walked off the course.

“Way to go, So Yeon,” Miyazato said. “You were on fire out there.”

The previous course record was 62, set by Angela Park and Jane Park in 2008 and matched last year by Ko and Ayako Uehara. Ko went on to win the tournament with a record score of 17 under.

Ko and Morgan Pressel held the previous 36-hole best at 14 under, set last year.

Ryu nearly won the tournament in 2013, losing playoff to Inbee Park.

She’s trying to win her fourth LPGA Tour title.

“I have a few good memories out here,” Ryu said. “Maybe losing in a playoff is not a good memory, but you know, close to a win. I think a lot of positive out there, so hopefully I can catch my opportunity tomorrow.”

For the full leaderboard click here.

LPGA Tour

Park shoots 63 to take 2 shot lead at NW Arkansas Championship

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

Sung Hyun Park has said one of her goals this season on the LPGA Tour is to win the Rookie of the Year award.

The South Korean might add the title of “winner” to her resume well before any season-ending awards, particularly after opening the NW Arkansas Championship with an 8-under 63 on Friday.

Park finished with nine birdies on her way to nearly matching the course record of 62, needing only 24 putts to take a two-shot lead over Mel Reid, Ally McDonald and So Yeon Ryu.

“My play was best with the putter today, very good,” Park said.

Reid also reached as low as 8 under midway through her round, making a hole-in-one on the par-3 11th. She used a 9-iron on the 135-yard hole, hitting it just past the flag before it spun back and rolled into the hole.

“As soon as I hit it, I thought, ‘Oh, it’s got a chance,”’ Reid said.

Local favourite Stacy Lewis and 56-year-old Juli Inkster were at 66 along with Felicity Johnson, Moriya Jutanugarn, and Katherine Kirk. Defending champion and second-ranked Lydia Ko opened with a 70

The 34-year-old Park won seven times and was the top earner last year on the Korean LPGA tour, but she also played in seven LPGA Tour events with an eye on making the move to the U.S. She has finished in the top 10 four times this year, nine times in her 19 total LPGA Tour appearances.

All that is lacking to solidify her rapid rise into the ranks of the LPGA’s elite is a victory, possibly this weekend in advance of next week’s KPMG Women’s PGA Championship.

“I wasn’t really surprised to see how well (Park) is (playing),” fellow South Korean Ryu said. “Even last year, she played a few LPGA tournaments as a non-member, but she would finish top-five, top-10. I think she is a really great golfer, and it’s a matter of how comfortable she is on the tour.”

Park played in the humid and overcast conditions during the morning at Pinnacle Country Club, avoiding a 46-minute weather delay and gusty conditions during the afternoon.

She entered the tournament fourth in the LPGA Tour in driving distance, and she lived up to that Friday, booming 290-yard drives on the 7,001-yard course.

Ryu was the only player in the afternoon to come within two shots of Park’s morning round, capping her round by reaching the par-5 18th in two and two-putting for her sixth birdie and a bogey-free round.

“I had two weeks off and was really fresh to play,” Ryu said. “I think was everything was really smooth from start to end, and it feels really great to be back.”

Former world No. 1 Ai Miyazato shot a 72 in her first round in the U.S. after announcing last month that she plans to retire at the end of the season.

Michelle Wie opened with a 68.

Hamilton’s Alena Sharp is T37 at 2-under-par.

For the full leaderboard click here.

PGA TOUR

Jordan Spieth maintains lead in Travelers Championship

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
(Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Jordan Spieth played well enough in the second round of the Travelers Championship to stay in the lead. Rory McIlroy played just well enough to stay in the tournament.

Spieth shot a 1-under 69 on Friday morning, then watched as a windy afternoon kept anyone from overtaking him.

The conditions also kept fourth-ranked Jason Day from making the cut for a second straight week. He bogeyed the 18th for a 70 to finish at 2 over. No. 3 McIlroy shot a 73, also closing with a bogey, but managed to just sneak into the weekend at even par.

Spieth, who began the day one shot ahead after a first-round 63, started on the back nine. The 23-year-old Texan had to recover from a double bogey on the par-5 13th hole after hitting his tee shot left and out-of-bounds. He also had four birdies and a bogey to reach 8 under.

“We’ve been kind of far behind in a lot of the events in making comeback runs,” said Spieth, the two-time major champion who tied for 35th last week in the U.S. Open. “But being able to be toward the front of the pack on a Saturday afternoon is a beautiful position to be in and one that we’ll certainly embrace. I’m going to try to have a lot of fun this weekend.”

Patrick Reed (66) and Troy Merritt (68) were tied for second. Both fought off wind gusts that exceeded 20 mph to hit 11 of 14 fairways and 14 of 18 greens.

“A golf course like this, even when the wind is blowing, if you’re hitting your tee shots straight, you’re going to have some wedges into the greens,” Reed said.

U.S. Open champion Brooks Koepka isn’t in Connecticut this week, but former Florida State teammate Chase Seiffert is in contention. The 25-year-old had to qualify Monday to get into the tournament. He made two eagles Friday and finished with a 66 to reach 6 under.

“I came into the week with no status on any tour, but I knew my game was really good,” Seiffert said. “I just had to get it done. To come out and play the first two rounds the way I did, it gives me a lot of confidence.

Wesley Bryan (67), Daniel Summerhays (68) and Boo Weekley (68) also were 5 under.

Graham DeLaet (Weyburn, Sask.) led briefly during the afternoon, but had a double bogey on 18 for a 70 to drop into the group at 5 under.

Eighty-five players made the cut and 68 finished within seven shots of the lead.

The biggest drama of the afternoon was watching the world’s third- and fourth-ranked players try to make it to the weekend.

Day was close, until he hit his second shot at 18 into a greenside bunker. He failed to get up and down, missing a 6-footer for par.

McIlroy seemed to be in good shape on 18. He was on the right edge of the fairway and looking at a second shot 105 yards from the hole. But he slipped during the swing and the ball went just 63 yards and farther right.

“My right foot completely came out from under me,” he said. “Obviously, there was a tiny bit of drizzle. Maybe a little bit of surface water. Just, I don’t know. It was weird. As soon as I started down, I just felt it and I couldn’t stop.”

McIlroy may have saved his tournament on the 13th. After hitting his first shot in the water and taking a drop, he hit his third shot to 17 feet and made par. He then putted in from off the green on 14. McIlroy, who didn’t qualify for the weekend at Erin Hills, hasn’t missed consecutive cuts since 2012.

“I won’t be thinking about trying to win the tournament from there,” he said. I’ll be thinking about trying to go and play a good, solid round of golf. But we have seen here in the past guys going out and shooting a low score and getting themselves back into the tournament.“

Anirban Lahiri of India, playing his first tournament since tying for second at the Memorial, shot a bogey-free 63 to move to 4 under. He made a 32-foot eagle putt on No. 13.

“I was out (since the Memorial) meditating,” he said. “So I’ve been a little bit rusty. The body is kind of easing its way back in. So I think I’m going to get better as the week progresses.”

Two-time Travelers champion Bubba Watson, who missed the cut at Erin Hills, will have another weekend off. He followed up a 75 in the first round with a 67 and finished at 2 over.

Mackenzie Hughes (Dundas, Ont.) and David Hearn (Brantford, Ont.), and Brad Fritsch (Ottawa, Ont,) are T27 at 3-under-par.

Weather could also affect the scoring Saturday. A forecast of rain led tournament officials to move the start of the third round back to 11 a.m., with the players going out in threesomes off the first and 10th tees.

For the full leaderboard click here.

Epson Tour

Canada’s Kirby T4 and Richdale T6 after round one of the Island Resort Championship

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
((Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

Canadian Jennifer Kirby posted a 4-under-par 68 and is T4 after 18 holes of the Symetra Tour’s Island Resort Championship at Sweetgrass Golf Club in Harris, Mich.

The Paris, Ont., product recorded six birdies and one double-bogey Friday to sit three shots back of the leader China’s Ruixin Liu who’s 7-under-par after an opening round 65.

A graduate of the Team Canada Amateur Squad Kirby’s play has been trending upwards. She’s made the cut in her last two Symetra Tour events after missing the cut in three of her previous four starts.

Kirby’s best result of the season came in her first event of the year, Florida’s Natural Charity Classic where she finished T34.

Kelowna, B.C., native Samantha Richdale is T6 after an opening round 3-under-par 69. She fired a 35 (-1) on the front nine and closed with a 34 (-2) on her second nine, to sit four shots back of Liu.

The Illinois State alumnus is looking to get back on track after missing the cut in two of her last four events and failing to finish inside the top-40.

Brogan McKinnon (Mississauga, Ont.) is T12 after an opening round 70 (-2), alongside Anna Kim (Toronto, Ont.)

Quebec City native and Team Canada Young Pro Squad member Anne-Catherine Tanguay, is T36 after an opening round 72 (E). Her teammate Augusta James (Bath, Ont.) is T92 (+3).

For the full Resort Island Championship click here.

Brittany Marchand receives 2017 Mackenzie Investments-GJAC Player Bursary

temp fix empty alt images for attachment
Brittany Marchand (Symetra Tour)

Symetra Tour standout Brittany Marchand has been awarded the 2017 Mackenzie Investments-GJAC Player Bursary.

Marchand, 24, was given the $3,000 prize after a vote of the membership of the Golf Journalists Association of Canada, an organization that represents the majority of Canada’s golf media.

“It’s an honour to be the recipient of the player bursary from the GJAC and Mackenzie Investments. This is a tremendous initiative and significantly helps young Canadians golfers achieve their dreams,” said Marchand. “Thanks to the GJAC and Mackenzie Investments—this will go a long way towards my journey to the LPGA.”

“We are very excited to name Brittany Marchand as the recipient of this year’s Player Bursary,” said GJAC President Robert Thompson. “Marchand is working hard on honing her craft to get to the next level, and we, along with Mackenzie Investments, wish her the best of luck moving forward.”

A rookie on the Symetra Tour in 2016, Marchand is back on that tour again this year, with her sights on making the LPGA Tour. Marchand has notched four top-20 finishes this year, with her best being a tie for 11th at the IOA Championship presented by Morongo Casino Resort & Spa in March.

She also was in the top-10 of the Manulife LPGA Classic in Cambridge, Ont. going into Sunday’s final round, which was a good confidence boost for her moving through the rest of the season.

Marchand, from Orangeville, Ont., captured the Ontario Women’s Amateur Championship in 2012 and recorded three wins while attending North Carolina State University.

“We are thrilled to once again partner with the Golf Journalists Association of Canada for this award and continue our support of golf in Canada,” said Court Elliott, Vice President Sponsorships, Mackenzie Investments. “Congratulations to Brittany and we hope winning this award gives her the confidence she needs to strive to the next level.”

In 2018, the player bursary will be awarded to a member of the Mackenzie Tour-PGA Tour Canada. The bursary will be awarded to Symetra Tour/Mackenzie Tour members in alternating years.

To learn more about the GJAC click here.