logo
James Wade sees off Gian van Veen to secure quarter-final berth at World Matchplay

James Wade sees off Gian van Veen to secure quarter-final berth at World Matchplay

RTÉ News​2 days ago
James Wade rolled back the years to move within two wins of emulating his 2007 World Matchplay triumph in Blackpool.
Wade thrilled the Winter Gardens crowd with a 16-13 quarter-final victory over Gian van Veen after early double trouble had left him 4-1 adrift.
After winning eight consecutive legs to lead 9-4, the 42-year-old Englishman had to withstand a Van Veen fightback before crossing the finishing line.
"I thought I'd thrown it away," Wade told Sky Sports after reaching his 10th Matchplay semi-final.
"He was quite weak early on in the game, I just thought I'd pummel him now and I couldn't do it.
"Towards the end he was coming back and it was God's gift to me (winning), not my ability. That is for sure.
"I was disgusted (with the start) but he didn't make the most of his opportunities. I'm just so happy now, I'm buzzing.
"I was so nervous, it was awful. I was tight and anxious and I don't need to be because I can play darts."
There was a 19-year age gap between the pair, with Wade having made his made his television debut at the 2003 BDO World Championship eight months after Van Veen was born.
But it was the experienced Wade who began nervously in missing his first 11 darts at a double - the same number as his total of missed doubles in 28 legs in beating Joe Cullen and Wessel Nijman - and Van Veen capitalised in the opening mini-session.
The Machine looked bemused at his malfunctioning on the big stage, but the first break did him a power of good.
Wade rattled off the next eight legs with his heavy scoring putting the 2024 world youth champion under enormous pressure.
Van Veen recovered from that assault to trade legs, but breaking rather than holding was what was required from his perspective and Wade kept him at bay.
The Dutchman finally broke to get within two legs at 13-11 and had two darts at double 16 to move to within one.
But Van Veen slipped wide of the wire and Wade held on for another marvellous Blackpool memory 18 years on from capturing the title.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65
Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65

The Journal

time8 minutes ago

  • The Journal

Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65

The 42 IRELAND'S PÁDRAIG HARRINGTON continues to lead the Senior Open after a second consecutive 65 to leave him on 13-under at Sunningdale Old Course in Berkshire. The 53-year-old took a one-shot lead into the third round and heads into the final round two shots clear of American Justin Leonard on 11-under. Denmark's Thomas Bjorn is just behind on 10-under. View the leaderboard here Harrington won the US Senior Open for the second time last month and has been a runner-up at the Senior Open in 2022 and 2023. 'I thought I was getting better but a little bit of riding my luck,' he told Sky Sports after today's third round. 'I don't think I rode my luck as much today, I wasn't out of position. But I certainly didn't play much better than yesterday. A little bit more cautious today. 'I don't feel very good about how I'm hitting the ball so I'm trying to get away from that and not worry so much about that because clearly I'm scoring well. I'm better off to be shooting 13-under par and not feel good about it than think you're swinging it great and be level par. 'I just need to go out and try to play golf tomorrow, hit the right shots at the right time.' Should he succeed tomorrow, Harrington will become the fifth player in history to win the Senior Open and Open Championship, following in the footsteps of Tom Watson, Gary Player, Bob Charles and Darren Clarke. Advertisement 'You're putting things in my head,' he laughed when asked about the prospect of achieving that feat. 'I'm not going to think about that. Those are the sort of things where you're getting ahead of yourself and I'll wait until tomorrow to try and digest that.' A HUGE birdie putt for @padraig_h 👏🏻 He's tied for the lead with five holes to play 👀 #SeniorOpen — Legends Tour (@euLegendsTour) July 26, 2025 Birdies on the fourth and ninth sent Harringon into the back nine in a strong position. He added another birdie on 11 before dropping a shot on the next hole. But he quickly recovered with back-to-back birdies, sinking a brilliant putt from around 30 feet at the 13th. He wrapped up another sizzling 65 with his sixth birdie of the day on 18. Meanwhile, Leona Maguire shot a 73 in the third round of the Women's Scottish Open to leave her in a tie for 18th place and 12 shots off the lead heading into the final round. Maguire started the round six shots off the lead, but has slipped back after her day was hampered by four bogeys. However, she finished strongly with a birdie on 13 and back-to-back birdies on 17 and 18. Lottie Woad's 67 sees her carry a two-shot lead into the final round. View the leaderboard here Written by Sinead Farrell and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .

Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65
Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65

The 42

time42 minutes ago

  • The 42

Harrington holds Senior Open lead heading into final round after another 65

IRELAND'S PÁDRAIG HARRINGTON continues to lead the Senior Open after a second consecutive 65 to leave him on 13-under at Sunningdale Old Course in Berkshire. The 53-year-old took a one-shot lead into the third round and heads into the final round two shots clear of American Justin Leonard on 11-under. Denmark's Thomas Bjorn is just behind on 10-under. Harrington won the US Senior Open for the second time last month and has been a runner-up at the Senior Open in 2022 and 2023. 'I thought I was getting better but a little bit of riding my luck,' he told Sky Sports after today's third round. 'I don't think I rode my luck as much today, I wasn't out of position. But I certainly didn't play much better than yesterday. A little bit more cautious today. Advertisement 'I don't feel very good about how I'm hitting the ball so I'm trying to get away from that and not worry so much about that because clearly I'm scoring well. I'm better off to be shooting 13-under par and not feel good about it than think you're swinging it great and be level par. 'I just need to go out and try to play golf tomorrow, hit the right shots at the right time.' Should he succeed tomorrow, Harrington will become the fifth player in history to win the Senior Open and Open Championship, following in the footsteps of Tom Watson, Gary Player, Bob Charles and Darren Clarke. 'You're putting things in my head,' he laughed when asked about the prospect of achieving that feat. 'I'm not going to think about that. Those are the sort of things where you're getting ahead of yourself and I'll wait until tomorrow to try and digest that.' A HUGE birdie putt for @padraig_h 👏🏻 He's tied for the lead with five holes to play 👀#SeniorOpen — Legends Tour (@euLegendsTour) July 26, 2025 Birdies on the fourth and ninth sent Harringon into the back nine in a strong position. He added another birdie on 11 before dropping a shot on the next hole. But he quickly recovered with back-to-back birdies, sinking a brilliant putt from around 30 feet at the 13th. He wrapped up another sizzling 65 with his sixth birdie of the day on 18. Meanwhile, Leona Maguire shot a 73 in the third round of the Women's Scottish Open to leave her in a tie for 18th place and 12 shots off the lead heading into the final round. Maguire started the round six shots off the lead, but has slipped back after her day was hampered by four bogeys. However, she finished strongly with a birdie on 13 and back-to-back birdies on 17 and 18. Lottie Woad's 67 sees her carry a two-shot lead into the final round.

Padraig Harrington takes two-shot lead heading into the final round at Senior Open Championship
Padraig Harrington takes two-shot lead heading into the final round at Senior Open Championship

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Padraig Harrington takes two-shot lead heading into the final round at Senior Open Championship

Padraig Harrington will take a two-stroke lead into the final round of the Senior Open Championship at Sunningdale after posting a second successive 65 at the famous venue. The Dubliner recorded six birdies in his third round, which included a lengthy putt from off the green on the par-three 13th and a birdie at the last after a scintillating approach from the right-side rough left him with a tap-in to reach 13-under after 54 holes. His third round contained just one bogey, after missing the fairway left at the 12th and being forced to lay up. Closing out in style 👊🏻🇮🇪 #SeniorOpen | @padraig_h — DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) July 26, 2025 In the final round, Harrington will be paired with 1997 Open Champion Justin Leonard, who also posted a 65, which contained seven birdies and two dropped shots, leaving him at 11-under heading into Sunday. One stroke further back is Thomas Bjorn, who had a frustrating day on the greens but registered timely back-to-back birdies on 16 and 17 to get to 10-under. There are a quartet of players in tied-fourth on eight-under par, including Kevin Sutherland and Steven Alker. Ernie Els, on seven-under, enters the final round six adrift of Harrington after a sluggish start to his round on Saturday. After his 65 on Friday, Harrington admitted he rode his luck after a "weird" round and wasn't much more enamoured with how he struck the ball today. "I still wasn't comfortable," Harrington told Sky Sports after his round. "I don't think I rode my luck as much today. I certainly didn't play much better than yesterday. Maybe a bit more cautious today. "I don't feel very good about how I'm hitting the ball. I'm trying to get away from that and not worry about that because clearly I'm scoring well. Better off shooting 13-under par and not feeling so good about it than thinking you're swinging it great and being level par. "I just need to get out and play golf tomorrow. Hit the right shot at the right time rather than just play, swing." Both he and Leonard are vying to become the fifth player to add the Senior Open Championship to the Open Championship, after Darren Clarke, Tom Watson, Gary Player and Bob Charles. Harrington, who won his second US Senior Open last month, is attempting to become the third Irish winner of the event, after Clarke (2022) and the late Christy O'Connor Jnr, who won it two years in succession in 1999 and 2000. As far as the prospect of joining that select group, Harrington wasn't looking too far ahead. "I'm not going to think about that. Those are the sort of things where you're getting ahead of yourself. I'll wait til tomorrow to try and digest that."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store