logo
DeChambeau headed for Ryder Cup return after strong rally at British Open

DeChambeau headed for Ryder Cup return after strong rally at British Open

Yahoo20-07-2025
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) — Bryson DeChambeau was among the players receiving a personal message from American Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley at Royal Portrush this week.
'He put something in our lockers that was pretty inspirational,' DeChambeau said Sunday.
'It meant a lot.'
Helped by a strong comeback at the British Open, DeChambeau appears to be headed for a return to the U.S. team for the matches against Europe at Bethpage Black in September.
He looked to be on his way home after shooting 7-over 78 in the first round Thursday, only to dig deep and bounce back with 65-68-64 finish. He was in a tie for 10th place, following up a tie for fifth at the Masters and tied second at the PGA Championship.
DeChambeau has seven top-10 finishes in his last 13 appearances in the majors, including a win at the U.S. Open last year.
DeChambeau solidified the No. 5 spot in the points standings for U.S. Ryder Cup qualifying. The top six qualify automatically to the team and Bradley also has six picks.
Because he plays on the LIV Golf circuit, DeChambeau cannot gain any more points before the qualifying period finishes after four more tournaments.
One way or the other, DeChambeau figures to be at Bethpage for his third Ryder Cup.
'I hope I can bring a lot of energy and a tsunami of a crowd that's going to be rooting for Team USA,' said the 31-year-old DeChambeau, whose popular YouTube channel adds to his status as one of the world's most famous golfers.
The U.S. team will be looking to win back the cup from Europe after a loss in Italy in 2023, when DeChambeau didn't play.
'This year's no joke,' he said. 'We're tired of it. We're tired of losing.'
DeChambeau was proud of the way he recovered from his poor round on Thursday at Portrush, helped in part by the better-than-forecast conditions at the links course off the North Atlantic.
'I always told you guys I like it when it's fair conditions. I can play well,' said the player nicknamed 'The Scientist.' "I still have to crack the code when it's raining and windy. But I feel like we're getting close to some opportunities and solutions for that.
'It just takes a long time to develop stuff. I'm starting to learn.'
Garcia's rage
Sergio Garcia played his last 16 holes at the British Open without a driver after snapping it in a rage after a bad drive.
Garcia slammed his driver onto the ground after hooking his tee shot on No. 2. It split in two and he threw the half containing the club head toward his golf bag.
'I've done that 50 times, and I've never broken a club,' he said. 'The shaft just snapped in half and I was surprised.'
Garcia went on to make birdie at the second hole and had four more in a 68 to finish 3 under for the tournament.
Lowry's grandstand finish
Shane Lowry stood over his ball beside the green at No. 18 and thought of Justin Rose 27 years ago.
Lowry said it would have felt 'pretty cool' to hole out at the 72nd hole to cap the Irishman's homecoming at Royal Portrush, just like Rose famously did as an amateur at Royal Birkdale in England in 1998.
The ball rolled toward the hole, struck the flagstick and stayed out. Lowry signed for a closing 5-under 66 but there would be no second claret jug for him at Portrush, after 2019.
Who knows, the next time the island of Ireland stages a British Open it might be at Portmarnock — a course 30 minutes from Lowry's house. The R&A has started a feasibility study regarding whether the seaside links north of Dublin can be added to the 10-venue rotation.
'I'd be able to stay at home and play in an Open,' Lowry said. 'It's one of the best golf courses in the world. I think it's good enough to host an Open, and hopefully it will soon.'
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hall eyes more success in Wales at Women's Open
Hall eyes more success in Wales at Women's Open

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hall eyes more success in Wales at Women's Open

Former champion Georgia Hall is hoping Wales will prove to be a happy hunting ground once more as she prepares for the AIG Women's Open at Royal Porthcawl. England's Hall is the most recent British winner of the Women's Open having triumphed at Royal Lytham & St Annes in 2018. The tournament comes to Wales for the first time this year as Royal Porthcawl plays host to the final golf major of 2025 starting on Thursday. And for Hall, that means a return to the scene of past successes. The 29-year-old won the Girls' Amateur Championship in Tenby, Pembrokeshire, in 2012 before going on to collect the Women's Amateur Championship at Machynys Golf Club in Carmarthenshire 12 months later. "Really I'm a big fan [of Wales]," Hall said. "I haven't played golf in Wales since those wins, so I think it will be a great test in Porthcawl." Porthcawl to host Women's Open in 2025 Open to be Wales' 'largest women's sporting event' The Women's Open is the biggest female sporting event ever staged in Wales, but Royal Porthcawl is no stranger to prestigious competitions. The south Wales links has staged the Walker Cup, the Curtis Cup and, on three occasions, the men's Senior Open. "I've played a couple of holes out here and it's a very tough course, I think it's definitely underrated," said Bournemouth-born Hall. "It's learning to know where to hit it. Especially on this golf course there's a lot of blind tee shots, so that will be key." Hall has won seven professional titles and is a five-time Solheim Cup player. Currently ranked 119th in the world, she is hoping the Women's Open will inspire the next generation of golfers. "It would be great to see the young girls supporting and seeing what the world's best women have to offer," she said. "I love to see a lot of people support, especially the youngsters. "I'm a massive fan of golf and what it can provide for the kids and people socialising and [helping] to make friends. It's great that people are learning to grow the game as well." Hall is also an advocate for the promotion of women's sport and wants to see increasing media coverage. "I think that having this event here and all the other women's sports [this summer] is amazing and hopefully in 10 years' time it will be bigger than it is now," she added.

Kurt Kitayama wins 3M Open, beating Sam Stevens by 1 for his 2nd PGA Tour victory
Kurt Kitayama wins 3M Open, beating Sam Stevens by 1 for his 2nd PGA Tour victory

Washington Post

time3 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Kurt Kitayama wins 3M Open, beating Sam Stevens by 1 for his 2nd PGA Tour victory

BLAINE, Minn. — Kurt Kitayama finished a sizzling weekend with a final-round 65 to win the 3M Open on Sunday, beating Sam Stevens by one stroke for his second PGA Tour victory. Kitayama, who shot a career-best and tournament-record-tying 60 on Saturday to enter the final round within one of the leaders, birdied six of the first eight holes to build a cushion on a 91-degree afternoon at the TPC Twin Cities. 'Getting off to a start like that kind of helps settle you down,' Kitayama said. 'Final round, second-to-last group, there's definitely some nerves.' Kitayama took bogey on the par-3 17th hole for the third straight day, which shrunk his lead to one while playing in the second-to-last group. Stevens was one group ahead and failed to birdie the reachable par-5 18th. After hitting his approach on the closing hole into a greenside bunker, Kitayama safely blasted to 18 feet and easily two-putted for par, finishing at 23-under 261 with his older brother, Daniel, caddying for only the second time this season. 'He helped me stay calm out there, make good decisions,' Kitayama said. 'It just helps having family on the bag.' Matt Wallace, David Lipsky, Pierceson Coody and Jake Knapp tied for third, three strokes back. Kitayama, who previously won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in 2023 , got a 500-point boost in the FedEx Cup standings to move inside the top 70 and secure a spot in the playoffs. He was projected to jump from 110th to 53rd. Kitayama, who tied for sixth at the 3M Open last year, has missed seven cuts this season. He tied for fifth twice, at the John Deere Classic and the CJ Cup Byron Nelson. This win was projected to bump his world ranking from 97th to 39th. The 32-year-old native of Chico, California, had his approach game in prime form. He hit a 7-iron from a fairway bunker on the par-4 14th from a fairway bunker within 2 feet of the hole for the last of his 20 birdies on the weekend, the most in a PGA Tour event since 2003. Stevens made five birdies on the back nine, continuing his strong season that includes three top-three finishes. He was second at the Farmers Insurance Open. The 29-year-old native of Fort Worth, Texas, is still seeking his first win, but this finish pushes him from 44th to 29th in the FedEx Cup with one event left in the regular season. 'With Kurt shooting 29 on the front nine, it's like, well, I'm six or seven back, whatever it was at the time. I can just play as freely and as aggressively as I want to,' Stevens said. 'I really didn't feel that many nerves on the back nine, which is good. Normally I get very nervous, so I had a lot of peace out there today.' Knapp, playing with Stevens, was in contention until his second shot on the 18th splashed into the water, leading to his only bogey of the day in his third top-five finish this year. Akshay Bhatia and Thorbjorn Olesen were the co-leaders going into Sunday, but the final pairing had a disappointing finish. Bhatia shot 75 and tied for 25th, and Olesen shot 73 to fall to a six-way tie for 14th that included first-round leader Adam Svensson. Svensson, whose 60 on Thursday was matched two days later by Kitayama, bounced back from a 75 on Friday with a 68-65 weekend. Defending champion Jhonattan Vegas had his best round of the tournament (67) and finished in a tie for 44th at 11-under. ___ AP golf:

2025 3M Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at TPC Twin Cities
2025 3M Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at TPC Twin Cities

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

2025 3M Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at TPC Twin Cities

Kurt Kitayama emerged victorious from a bunched up leaderboard in an exciting final round at the 2025 3M Open. Kitayama walked away from TPC Twin Cities with a trophy and 500 FedEx Cup Points, but that's not all. He also won a good chunk of cash. Here's the breakdown of how much money each PGA Tour player earned at the 3M Open, where there was a purse of $8.4 million. 3M Open 2025 prize money payouts POS PLAYER SCORE MONEY 1 K. Kitayama -23 $1,512,000 2 S. Stevens -22 $915,600 T3 D. Lipsky -20 $410,025 T3 M. Wallace -20 $410,025 T3 Pi. Coody -20 $410,025 T3 J. Knapp -20 $410,025 T7 W. Mouw -19 $263,900 T7 A. Noren -19 $263,900 T7 T. Kanaya -19 $263,900 T10 N. Goodwin -18 $263,900 T10 C. Gotterup -18 $263,900 T12 T. Montgomery -17 $186,900 T12 W. Clark -17 $186,900 T14 A. Svensson -16 $140,700 T14 C. Kirk -16 $140,700 T14 M. Meissner -16 $140,700 T14 T. Moore -16 $140,700 T14 J. Svensson -16 $140,700 T14 T. Olesen -16 $140,700 T20 C. Bezuidenhout -15 $95,508 T20 G. Woodland -15 $95,508 T20 B. Valdes -15 $95,508 T20 B. Kohles -15 $95,508 T20 E. Grillo -15 $95,508 T25 T. Rosenmueller -14 $69,020 T25 H. Higgs -14 $69,020 T25 A. Bhatia -14 $69,020 T28 K. Roy -13 $50,590 T28 K. Kisner -13 $50,590 T28 T. Kim -13 $50,590 T28 N. Hardy -13 $50,590 T28 C. Champ -13 $50,590 T28 R. Fowler -13 $50,590 T28 V. Perez -13 $50,590 T28 C. Young -13 $50,590 T28 S. Power -13 $50,590 T28 C. Ramey -13 $50,590 T28 N. Lashley -13 $50,590 T39 G. Sigg -12 $34,860 T39 G. Higgo -12 $34,860 T39 A. Eckroat -12 $34,860 T39 M. Homa -12 $34,860 T39 J. Dahmen -12 $34,860 T44 J. Vegas -11 $24,696 T44 Z. Blair -11 $24,696 T44 P. Fishburn -11 $24,696 T44 A. Hadwin -11 $24,696 T44 J. Bramlett -11 $24,696 T44 T. Merritt -11 $24,696 T44 M. Pavon -11 $24,696 T44 A. Smalley -11 $24,696 T44 M. La Sasso (a) -11 $0 T53 M. Hughes -10 $20,118 T53 C. Villegas -10 $20,118 T53 I. Salinda -10 $20,118 T53 A. Scott -10 $20,118 T57 R. Hoey -9 $19,320 T57 V. Whaley -9 $19,320 T57 D. Skinns -9 $19,320 T57 B. Garnett -9 $19,320 T61 M. Hubbard -8 $18,396 T61 T. Cone -8 $18,396 T61 M. Schmid -8 $18,396 T61 B. Silverman -8 $18,396 T61 C. Del Solar -8 $18,396 T61 S. Burns -8 $18,396 T61 L. Clanton -8 $18,396 T68 M. McCarty -7 $17,472 T68 T. Pendrith -7 $17,472 T68 N. Norgaard -7 $17,472 T68 S. Ryder -7 $17,472 T72 A. Rozner -5 $16,968 T72 H. Norlander -5 $16,968 74 S. Fisk -4 $16,968 75 D. Ford -3 $16,548 76 T. Dickson -2 $16,380 This article originally appeared on Golfweek: 3M Open 2025 payouts, prize money for each player in Minnesota

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