
Pagdanganan among four tied for the LPGA lead in Mexico
Bianca Pagdanganan felt right at home in the stifling heat and humidity Thursday on the Yucatan Peninsula, using her power to set up a two-putt birdie on the par-5 18th for a 4-under 68 and a four-way share of the lead in the Mexico Riviera Maya Open.
Pagdanganan, the 27-year-old from the Philippines, managed to hit all but two greens despite not spending much time in the fairway. Her two-putt birdie from 15 feet allowed her to join Chisato Iwai, Jenny Shin and Brianna Do.
The wind was enough of a challenge on the El Camaleon course at Mayakoba. It was the heat index that became the biggest challenge and limited the scoring chances.
Shin was the first to reach 68, making seven birdies but slowed with a double bogey on the 16th hole. Asked about her good start, Shin replied, 'I actually don't remember because it's so hot. I don't remember the first birdie.'
But she remembered having a hot putter, mostly for birdie and a few parts. Still, it was hard getting past the stifling conditions.
'I didn't anticipate heat like this,' Shin said. 'I was really shocked when I got here. Definitely does feel like I'm in Southeast Asia. Been hydrating a lot. Drinking a lot of salted water. A lot of electrolytes. I haven't really been practising, so I'm going to head straight to the hotel room after this.'
Chisato birdied two of her last five holes, while Do got off to a superb start and was 4 under through her opening five holes. She cooled after that, with one bogey and a birdie on the 18th to claim a share of the lead.
Five more players, including Hye-Jin Choi and Jenny Bae, were at 69.
Charley Hull, at No. 15 in the world the highest-ranked player in the final event before the U.S. Women's Open, missed short putts down the stretch and had to settle for a 72. One of those misses came on the par-5 13th, when she hit her second shot to inside 3 feet.
Pagdanganan felt at relative ease during the round.
'It felt like a pretty easy round, which honestly I haven't felt that in a while,' she said. 'To be able to have that out here feels really good. I hit a lot of greens – not a lot of fairways. But I felt like it didn't matter that much to me today. I felt like I was swinging it pretty good. I had a pretty clear headspace.
'So I guess mentally and physically everything just lined up really well for me today.'
It was a tough day for two of the more prominent Mexican players. Gaby Lopez, who played a role in getting the LPGA back to Mexico for the first time since 2017, had eight bogeys in her round of 79. Maria Fassi, a former NCAA champion at Arkansas, had two early birdies but struggled to a 75.
Mayakoba previously hosted a PGA Tour event, and then it had a LIV Golf event last year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


National Post
16 hours ago
- National Post
Mexico defeats Canada in group play at CONCACAF Women's Under-20 Championship
ALAJUELA — Montserrat Saldivar scored twice Monday to help defending champion Mexico defeat Canada 4-2 and finish atop Group B in a weather-interrupted game at the CONCACAF Women's Under-20 Championship. Article content Both teams had already accomplished their goal of qualifying for the 2026 FIFA U-20 World Cup by virtue of assuring themselves a top-two finish in the group with wins over Panama and Nicaragua. But topping the pool likely means avoiding the seven-time champion U.S. in the semifinal. Article content Monday's game, which started in a torrential downpour, was tied 1-1 in the 30th minute when American referee Alyssa Nichols pulled the bedraggled players from the pitch at Estadio Alejandro Morera Soto. Article content The game resumed some two hours 40 minutes later. The heavy rain had stopped by then but there was still some water left on the pitch, making for some difficult distribution. Article content Maria Gonzalez also scored for Mexico, which profited from an own goal by Janet Okeke. Article content Teegan Melenhorst and Annabelle Chukwu replied for Canada, which outshot Mexico 20-12 (5-4 in shots on target). Article content The eight-team CONCACAF tournament, which runs through Sunday, will send four CONCACAF sides to the 24-team FIFA U-20 World Cup, scheduled for September 2026 in Poland. Article content The U.S., which has already qualified for the CONCACAF semifinals at 2-0-0, wraps up Group A play Tuesday against Costa Rica (1-0-1) while Puerto Rica (0-1-1) faces Guyana (0-2-0). Article content The Americans have lost just three of 64 matches all-time at the tournament. Article content Article content Trailing 3-1 at the break, Canada sent on Chukwu, who scored three goals in the first two games of the tournament. And the 18-year-old from Ottawa did not disappoint, cutting the lead to 3-2 in the 59th minute with a header off a Melenhorst cross following a Canadian corner. Article content Chukwu, who scored three goals in Canada's opening two wins, added to her Canadian youth international scoring record, previously held by Christine Sinclair. Chukwu now has 38 goals in 40 games from the under-15 to under-20 level. Article content Chukwu, who plays collegiate soccer at Notre Dame, has been called into camp by the Canadian senior side but has yet to win a cap. Article content Mexico added an insurance goal in the 84th minute via Saldivar, who beat Canadian 'keeper Noelle Henning after a pass by Michel Fong split the Canadian defence. Article content The wet conditions made for spotty early handling and Canada went ahead in the 18th minute after an errant clearance by Mexico goalkeeper Mariangela Medina, who plays collegiate soccer at UCLA. The ball went to Melenhorst, who roofed a shot past Medina.


National Post
a day ago
- National Post
After win at Memorial, it's time to start comparing Scottie Scheffler to prime Tiger Woods
Scottie Scheffler has become inevitable. Article content Article content It's not if he's going to make a run in a tournament, it's when he's going to make a run. Article content The World No. 1 and undisputed king of golf at the moment did it again on Sunday by winning the Memorial Tournament in front of Jack Nicklaus for the second year in a row. Article content 1. The Tiger conversation Article content Scheffler became the only back-to-back winner in tournament history other than … you guessed it, Tiger Woods, who went back-to-back-to-back from 1999-2001. Article content Article content It's over, the time has come. Scottie has now entered the territory where we can start comparing some of his accomplishments to prime Tiger Woods without apologizing for it, or adding in a list of caveats. That in itself is perhaps his most amazing accomplishment. Article content The margins of victory are what immediately jumps out as Tiger-like in recent months. He won on Sunday by four; he won the PGA Championship by five and he won the Byron Nelson by eight. And all that was in May. Article content Stats guru Justin Ray posted on Sunday that the list of players with 3+ wins in the same season by four or more shots in the past 30 years is: Tiger 2000, 5 times; Tiger 2003, 3; Scottie 2024, 3; Scottie 2025 3 (so far). Article content Speaking of Jack Nicklaus, it's always great to hear the Golden Bear weigh in on anything. Article content As if what Scheffler is doing isn't scary enough, Nicklaus had this to say about the world No. 1 on Saturday's broadcast: 'He reminds me a lot of the way I tried to play.' Article content The comparisons I see between the two are partly in their attitudes. There is/was a matter-of-factness to the way they both go about the game: Head down, consistent, every week showing up at the first tee with the same attitude and plan. Article content Article content That might not sound like a lot, but it harkens back to the opening line from this newsletter. Jack Nicklaus was inevitable. Scottie Scheffler has become inevitable. And that scares the hell out of the competition. Article content When you ask other players who played with and against absolute legends in any sport what it was that they were most impressed with, it's amazing how many times you'll hear them say something along the lines of, 'He was the same guy every day.' Article content That sounds kind of silly, but for professional athletes who know how easy it is to let things slip away for a shot, or a shift, or a day, or a year, it's that utter sameness, physically, mentally, emotionally, Every. Single. Day. that seems otherworldly.


CTV News
a day ago
- CTV News
Cruz Azul whips Vancouver Whitecaps 5-0 to win CONCACAF Champions Cup
Angel Sepulveda of Mexico's Cruz Azul, left, is congratulated after scoring his side's 5th goal against Canada's Vancouver Whitecaps during the CONCACAF Champions Cup final soccer match in Mexico City, Sunday, June 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano) Ángel Sepúlveda scored twice and Cruz Azul routed the Vancouver Whitecaps 5-0 on Sunday to win its seventh CONCACAF Champions Cup. Sepúlveda finished with a tournament-best nine goals. Ignacio Rivero, Lorenzo Faravelli and Mateusz Bogusz also scored for Cruz Azul, which built a 4-0 lead by halftime. The Liga MX club tied crosstown rival Club America for most titles in the tournament. It was Cruz Azul's first title since 2013-14 when La Máquina beat Tijuana. The Whitecaps were looking to make history as the first Canadian team to win the tournament, and the first winner from Major League Soccer since the Seattle Sounders in 2022. 'We came with hope, aspiration and ambition, of course now we leave with devastation,' said Whitecaps coach Jesper Sorensen. 'But we have played a great tournament going this far. We have beaten great teams on the way under tough conditions. But today we couldn't really put up a good performance to really shake a good team. 'Football at this level is brutal and if you cannot put up your best performance when it's needed. It makes it difficult (to succeed) … It was the entire group's ambition to win and play our best game of the season so far, and I would say that maybe we did the opposite.' Cruz Azul had four shots on goal in the first half and scored on all of them. La Máquina took advantage of a defensive lapse by the Whitecaps and Ignacio Rivero coolly finished with his left foot in the seventh minute in front of cheering home fans at Estadio Olímpico Universitario. Faravelli's goal came after a similar defensive lapse, struck from distance and went into the net after hitting the post. After Sepúlveda's sliding goal in the 37th, Bogusz added a goal in the 45th just before the teams went into the break. Sepúlveda added another goal on a header in the 50th. It was Cruz Azul goalkeeper Kevin Mier's fourth clean sheet of the tournament. The Whitecaps had no shots on goal during the match. Vancouver was without Sebastian Berhalter because of yellow card accumulation. He scored in both legs of the semifinal against Lionel Messi and Inter Miami. The Whitecaps had hoped that captain Ryan Gauld would return from a knee injury in time for the game but he was not available. Cruz Azul advanced with a two-legged victory over UANL Tigres. It was the first meeting between the Whitecaps and Cruz Azul. A sold-out watch party in downtown Vancouver went from wild to mild by halftime, sensing a runner-up status was inevitable. Social media reaction was mixed, with people applauding the Whitecaps' superb season and unbeaten streak, while people such as Rob @604robbie on X stated: 'Nothing more Vancouver sports then not showing up in the most important game of the year.' Glyn Bough @GlynBough said on X the difference in class was so evident. 'The speed of though, action, positioning and quality of pass or defending the pass is at a different level from the Mexican side.'