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The Independent
42 minutes ago
- The Independent
Scottie Scheffler emulates Tiger Woods with latest dominant win
World No 1 Scottie Scheffler emulated Tiger Woods by successfully defending the Memorial Tournament title at Muirfield Village. Only five-time winner Woods had previously retained the crown between 1999 and 2001, but Scheffler claimed a second consecutive success with a four-stroke victory over Ben Griffin. "Well, you did it again," tournament host Jack Nicklaus told him walking off the green. Scheffler has now won three times in four starts after wins at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson and PGA Championship. "It's pretty cool," Scheffler told CBS Sports after his 16th PGA Tour victory. "It's always a hard week as it's so challenging to play this tournament. "I battled really hard over the weekend and Ben made things interesting down the stretch, but overall it was a great week." Scheffler took a one-shot lead into Sunday and the chasing pack failed to put him under any concerted pressure. Birdies at the seventh, 11th and 15th gave Scheffler breathing space in a final round two-under par 70, with a solitary dropped shot coming at the 10th – his first bogey in 32 holes. Griffin closed with a 73 to finish one ahead of Austria's Sepp Straka, with Nick Taylor a shot back in fourth. "You know Scottie's probably going to play a good round of golf. The guy's relentless,' said Straka after the round. 'He loves competition, and he doesn't like giving up shots. But it's one of those courses where it can always happen, so you got to be prepared for it. I felt like I gave myself a lot of chances to kind of make a push." England's Tommy Fleetwood was tied 16th, Scotland's Robert MacIntyre tied 20th but Shane Lowry, of Ireland, dropped down the leaderboard for a share of 23rd place with a disappointing 77. Meanwhile, Rickie Fowler had his first top 10 of the year at just the right time. He made par on the 18th to tie for seventh, earning him the lone available qualification spot for The Open at Royal Portrush in July. Fowler tied with Brandt Snedeker at one-under but gets the one Open exemption available based on a higher world ranking – Fowler at No 124 and Snedeker at No 430. "That's one I've wanted on the schedule," said Fowler, who faces a 36-hole qualifier for the US Open on Monday.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day, Monday, June 2, 2025
News PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day, Monday, June 2, 2025 Show all 13


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Sweden's Stark holds nerve to win US Women's Open
US Women's Open final standings -7 M Stark (Swe); -5 N Korda (US), R Taneka (Jpn); -4 H-J Choi (Kor), R Yin (Chi), M Saigo (Jpn); -3 H Cooper (US), H Shibuno (Jpn)Selected others: -1 C Hull (Eng), +1 J Lopez Ramirez (Spa), +2 M Lee (Aus), +3 L Ko (NZ), +5 L Woad (Eng), +9 G Dryburgh (Sco)Full leaderboard Maja Stark claimed her first major title with a two-shot victory at the US Women's Open to become the third Swede to lift the the first Swedish winner since Annika Sorenstam won her third title in 2006, held off the challenge of world number one Nelly Korda of the United States and Japan's Rio Taneka at Erin Hills in Wisconsin."This just feels huge," she said after a closing round of level-par 72 saw her win on seven under. "You always know that it's possible, but there are so many good golfers on this tour. I [didn't] think I would be able to do it this week."I just didn't want to get ahead of myself. I thought there's still a lot of golf left to be played and I just felt like people are going to pass me probably, and I just had to stay calm through that."I didn't look at the leaderboards until I was on 17. I caught a glimpse of it. It was nice."The 25-year-old started the final round with a one-shot lead and extended her lead to two with her first birdie of the day at the sixth as her playing partner Julia Lopez Ramirez who was three back at the start of the day, closed to within one after playing the front nine in two under Stark birdied the 11th, moments after Korda bogeyed the 13th, to take control and she reached nine under when she picked up another shot on the challenge petered out on the back nine and she closed with a bogey as she recorded her best finish in the US Women's allowed Stark the comfort of finishing with successive bogeys on the final two who has won two majors, is still seeking her first victory since November and the 26-year-old had mixed feelings after her final round of 71."It's still very complicated," she said of her relationship with the championship. "It's just an absolute heartbreaker."Hopefully I can build off of this, putting myself in contention at a major and obviously just slipping just short. It hurts a little, but I'm happy with the progress and hopefully I can continue like this."England's Charley Hull started the final round at level par and had four birdies and 10 pars in her opening 14 holes to climb the leaderboard. But she bogeyed the 15th and dropped two more shots on the 17th as she closed with a 71 to finish joint 12th on one Englishwoman Lottie Woad finished with a three-over 75 to pick up the prize as the best amateur on five Gemma Dryburgh, who was three under at the halfway stage, closed with a second successive 78 to drop to nine over par.